This paper examines the role of the revolutionary press in France in the realisation of the Enlightenment notion of “public opinion”. The press, it is argued, saw itself as advancing civic republicanism based on public service as opposed to the liberal, individualistic ethic of today. Exploring the relevance of Habermas’s theories of discourse ethics and MacIntyre’s notions of “communitarianism”, the paper argues that the revolutionary press promoted a “democratisation” of honour. The conclusion draws on the theories of Sandel to argue that newspapers provided the crucial narratives by which people made sense of their condition and interpreted their shared experiences at a time of revolutionary upheaval
This article seeks to explore the impact of the radicalization of the French Revolution on the way i...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the image of the ancient republics in the early months of th...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Political writings of eighteenth-century France have been so f...
In this paper I focus on the relation between the rise of public opinion and the revival of republic...
It is a commonplace in historical research to consider the 18th century emergence of a public, publi...
In this volume an international team of contributors address several key themes surrounding the role...
This paper examines the ideological content and implications of texts from Britain and North America...
For a more recent version of this publication, please see: https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.1...
Periodicals were an integral part of eighteenth-century European civilisation. This volume brings to...
Defence date: 23 March 2018Examining Board: Professor Martin van Gelderen, European University Insti...
Socialist and Catholic, poet and soldier, mystic and political thinker, Charles Péguy remains a figu...
Freedom of expression and censorship are frequently cast in opposing but symmetrical terms. Accordin...
Toleration, freedom of thought and liberation from social and intellectual convention have long been...
Gilles Feyel, Journalism during the Revolution : the Power of Truth and Justice at the Service of th...
© 1999 Dr. Kathleen Edna MustafaThere is wide acknowledgment that the press was closely involved in ...
This article seeks to explore the impact of the radicalization of the French Revolution on the way i...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the image of the ancient republics in the early months of th...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Political writings of eighteenth-century France have been so f...
In this paper I focus on the relation between the rise of public opinion and the revival of republic...
It is a commonplace in historical research to consider the 18th century emergence of a public, publi...
In this volume an international team of contributors address several key themes surrounding the role...
This paper examines the ideological content and implications of texts from Britain and North America...
For a more recent version of this publication, please see: https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.1...
Periodicals were an integral part of eighteenth-century European civilisation. This volume brings to...
Defence date: 23 March 2018Examining Board: Professor Martin van Gelderen, European University Insti...
Socialist and Catholic, poet and soldier, mystic and political thinker, Charles Péguy remains a figu...
Freedom of expression and censorship are frequently cast in opposing but symmetrical terms. Accordin...
Toleration, freedom of thought and liberation from social and intellectual convention have long been...
Gilles Feyel, Journalism during the Revolution : the Power of Truth and Justice at the Service of th...
© 1999 Dr. Kathleen Edna MustafaThere is wide acknowledgment that the press was closely involved in ...
This article seeks to explore the impact of the radicalization of the French Revolution on the way i...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the image of the ancient republics in the early months of th...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Political writings of eighteenth-century France have been so f...