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Robert Darnton An Early Information Society
Online Discussion Archive:
Topic and Reply 3
Topic: Revolutionary Discontinuity?
Conf: Discussion of Darnton's Article
From: David Andress david.andress@port.ac.uk
Date: Friday, March 17, 2000 09:35 AM
Robert Darnton's excellent piece makes clear a whole host of elements
within the history of eighteenth-century court-capital relations, and
shows us the interrelation of what might have been thought to be
distinct "elite" and "popular" cultures.
What is most thought-provoking for me, as a historian of the French
Revolution, is that, while many of the features of Darnton's
information world quite clearly carry over into the revolutionary
context, there is a significant extent to which some do not. One key
feature present in the events he depicts is the acceptance, by
everyone except the police, of a realm of popular comment on political
affairs. I have written elsewhere of the extent to which Parisians
continued to practice such comment, at least into 1791, but as I have
noted, the revolutionary authorities and revolutionary commentators
were extremely ambivalent about the legitimacy of such popular
political voices. (See most recently "The Denial of Social Conflict in
the French Revolution: Discourses around the Champ de Mars Massacre,
17 July 1791," _French Historical Studies_ 22, no. 2 [1999]: 183-209;
and "Press and Public in the French Revolution: A Parisian Case-Study
from 1791," _European History Quarterly_ 28, no. 1 [1998]: 51-80.)
One of the key points that Darnton articulates about the critical
messages of the Old Regime is that they had the figure of the king at
their heart. Thus we might suggest that, in a sense, the common
position of all others as subjects of his majesty rendered them equal
participants in a critical discourse about the reality, or otherwise,
of that "majesty." Once the revolution had made the Nation into its
sovereign, might we not further suggest that such a critical discourse
became deeply problematic? One could criticize the public person of
the king from "outside," but it was very difficult for revolutionaries
to locate a similar "outside" from which criticism of the Nation (and
its representatives very clearly assumed themselves to be the Nation,
from the very origins of the "National Assembly") could be legitimate.
The logic of the existence of the politically active Nation, and its
representation in the Assembly, was that the only "outside" position
available to a French citizen was the one that implied a
counterrevolutionary intent.
The revolutionary sovereign was no more able to accept criticism than
had been the monarchy, but it was far more effective at excluding it
from public expression.
David Andress
Topic: Re: Revolutionary Discontinuity?
Conf: Discussion of Darnton's Article
From: Robert Darnton darnton@princeton.edu
Date: Tuesday, March 28, 2000 02:17 PM
David Andress makes an important point: the ground rules governing the
circulation of information and the actual practices of talking about
public affairs changed fundamentally in 1789. Of course, continuities
also existed. As Laura Mason has shown in _Singing the French
Revolution_, revolutionary songs echoed those of the Old Regime.
Caf³s, public gardens, the Palais-Royal continued to be hotbeds of
political gossip, and police spies continued to report on it
throughout the entire course of the revolution. In fact, the
outspokenness of the French, even under the Terror, is likely to amaze
anyone who reads documents about daily life in the Parisian Sections
in 1793-1794 while looking backward across the history of oppression
in the twentieth century. But David Andress correctly emphasizes a
contradiction at the heart of popular sovereignty as it was understood
at the height of the revolution: to criticize those who spoke in the
name of the Nation could be construed as placing oneself outside the
Nation, in the position of a counter-revolutionary. That contradiction
may be implicit in articles 3 and 6 of the Declaration of the Rights
of Man and of the Citizen, which locate sovereignty in the nation and
define law as the expression of the general will, in contrast to
articles 10 and 11, which guarantee freedom of opinion and expression.
Article 11 ends with a dangerous proviso: "subject to accountability
for abuse of this freedom in the cases determined by law." By 1791, as
David Andress shows in his own research, the law was beginning to bend
before such cases. After August 1792, conditions became so
catastrophic that freedom of expression was stifled in the name of a
higher law: the _salut public_. Should we attribute this tragedy to
the contradiction itself? For my part, I would insist on the extreme
conditions that made the Terror thinkable in 1793-1794 rather than on
the thinking of the delegates to the Estates General in 1789 or the
thoughts of Rousseau. Political gossip under the Old Regime did indeed
turn on the personal qualities of the king, but it does not follow
that democracy is incompatible with freedom of expression and the
liberty of the press.
Robert Darnton
Princeton University
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