State and society in eighteenth-century France: a study in political power and popular revolution in Languedoc

"In contrast to the traditional Marxist interpretation of emerging capitalism and a revolutionary bourgeoisie, this book shows that commodified labor, fundamental to the existence of a capitalist bourgeoisie, did not take shape in eighteenth-century France. The mass of the population consisted...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Miller, Stephen Jacobus 1968- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Leiden ; Boston Brill [2023]
Edition:Revised and updated edition
Series:Historical materialism book series volume 263
Subjects:
Online Access:Inhaltsverzeichnis
Summary:"In contrast to the traditional Marxist interpretation of emerging capitalism and a revolutionary bourgeoisie, this book shows that commodified labor, fundamental to the existence of a capitalist bourgeoisie, did not take shape in eighteenth-century France. The mass of the population consisted of peasants and artisans in possession of land and workshops, and embedded in autonomous communities. The old regime bourgeoisie and nobility thus developed within the absolutist state in order to have the political means to impose feudal forms of exploitation on the people. These class relations explain the crisis of 1789 and the revolutionary conflicts of the 1790s"--
Physical Description:VIII, 248 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme
ISBN:9789004526105
9004526102

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