The People's Two Powers revisits the emergence of democracy during the French Revolution and examines how French liberalism evolved in response. By focusing on two concepts often studied separately – public opinion and popular sovereignty – Arthur Ghins uncovers a significant historical shift in the understanding of democracy. Initially tied to the direct exercise of popular sovereignty by Rousseau, Condorcet, the Montagnards, and Bonapartist theorists, democracy was first rejected, then redefined by liberals as rule by public opinion throughout the nineteenth century. This redefinition culminated in the invention of the term 'liberal democracy' in France in the 1860s. Originally conceived in opposition to 'Caesarism' during the Second Empire, the term has an ongoing and important legacy, and was later redeployed by French liberals against shifting adversaries – 'totalitarianism' from the 1930s onward, and 'populism' since the 1980s.
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Introduction; 1. Rousseau's democracy; 2. Representative democracy during the French revolution; 3. The liberal response: Madame de Staël and representative government; 4. Bonaparte and his collaborators: 'democracy purged of all its drawbacks'; 5. The liberal response: Benjamin Constant's representative government; 6. Tocqueville's democracy; 7. The first theorists of liberal democracy; Epilogue: liberal democracy in the twentieth century.
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Examines the emergence of democracy and liberalism in modern France, exploring the distinction between public opinion and popular sovereignty.
Product details
ISBN
9781009688826
Published
2026-02-19
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Weight
630 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
19 mm
Age
UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
320
Author