Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution

Was Denis Diderot “the master of Danton”, as the historian Aulard asserted, or was he “the master of Brissot” as Jean Dautry stated? Or rather, was the philosophe the true inspiration of Babeuf? From a general point of view, research on the circulation and heritage of Diderotian political ideas in E...

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Autor principal: Giuseppina D'Antuono
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Publicado: Firenze University Press 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:17b805bbe10144dfacd1960ef4ffff152021-11-17T09:14:42ZHistoriographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution10.36253/ds-116962531-4165https://doaj.org/article/17b805bbe10144dfacd1960ef4ffff152021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ds/article/view/11696https://doaj.org/toc/2531-4165Was Denis Diderot “the master of Danton”, as the historian Aulard asserted, or was he “the master of Brissot” as Jean Dautry stated? Or rather, was the philosophe the true inspiration of Babeuf? From a general point of view, research on the circulation and heritage of Diderotian political ideas in Europe has mostly been interpreted in relationships of analogy or in contrast with the event, ideas and men of the French Revolution. This article aims to analyze the debate on the most recent historical readings that have reawakened the hermeneutic dialectic on the relationship between the political thought and works of Denis Diderot and the spokesmen of the French Revolution. The significance of this study thus lies in its focus on the most recent historiographical readings on the uses of Diderotian stratified production, which over time have distorted his political vocabulary. At the present time, we have some data – from the cross-analysis between the study of unpublished sources and new research perspectives on political traineeships and clandestine circles – —on which to base future research: on the eve of the Revolution, Diderotian thought circulated in clandestine pamphlets and, in those same years, some men of the future Constituent took inspiration from the philosophe. Therefore, the category of “general will” in use among the men of the Constituent and the Legislative (Thouret, Brissot) seems not to be of Rousseauian derivation only. Giuseppina D'AntuonoFirenze University PressarticleDiderotFrench RevolutionHistoriographical HeritagesGeneral willMen of the ConstituentModern history, 1453-D204-475ENFRITDiciottesimo Secolo, Vol 6 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
IT
topic Diderot
French Revolution
Historiographical Heritages
General will
Men of the Constituent
Modern history, 1453-
D204-475
spellingShingle Diderot
French Revolution
Historiographical Heritages
General will
Men of the Constituent
Modern history, 1453-
D204-475
Giuseppina D'Antuono
Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution
description Was Denis Diderot “the master of Danton”, as the historian Aulard asserted, or was he “the master of Brissot” as Jean Dautry stated? Or rather, was the philosophe the true inspiration of Babeuf? From a general point of view, research on the circulation and heritage of Diderotian political ideas in Europe has mostly been interpreted in relationships of analogy or in contrast with the event, ideas and men of the French Revolution. This article aims to analyze the debate on the most recent historical readings that have reawakened the hermeneutic dialectic on the relationship between the political thought and works of Denis Diderot and the spokesmen of the French Revolution. The significance of this study thus lies in its focus on the most recent historiographical readings on the uses of Diderotian stratified production, which over time have distorted his political vocabulary. At the present time, we have some data – from the cross-analysis between the study of unpublished sources and new research perspectives on political traineeships and clandestine circles – —on which to base future research: on the eve of the Revolution, Diderotian thought circulated in clandestine pamphlets and, in those same years, some men of the future Constituent took inspiration from the philosophe. Therefore, the category of “general will” in use among the men of the Constituent and the Legislative (Thouret, Brissot) seems not to be of Rousseauian derivation only.
format article
author Giuseppina D'Antuono
author_facet Giuseppina D'Antuono
author_sort Giuseppina D'Antuono
title Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution
title_short Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution
title_full Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution
title_fullStr Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution
title_full_unstemmed Historiographical heritages: Denis Diderot and the men of the French Revolution
title_sort historiographical heritages: denis diderot and the men of the french revolution
publisher Firenze University Press
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/17b805bbe10144dfacd1960ef4ffff15
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