Theatre, Opera, and Audiences in Revolutionary Paris: Analysis and Repertory
By (Author) R. Emmet Kennedy
By (author) Marie Netter
By (author) Mark Olsen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
16th February 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
Cultural studies
792.0944361
424
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
737g
This inventory is the result of a study of all performances of plays and operas announced in two Parisian newspapers during the decade of the French Revolution. The research conducted by a team of French and American historians tests the two-century-old assumption that Parisian theatre during the French Revolution was nothing more than a forum for political debate. This work should offer a valuable resource for scholars of French theatre, opera, and literature, as well as historians of the French Revolution.
.,.".this book should become a standard reference source for cultural historians engaged in any study focusing on the years 1789-1799 in France."-European Studies Journal
....this book should become a standard reference source for cultural historians engaged in any study focusing on the years 1789-1799 in France.-European Studies Journal
...".this book should become a standard reference source for cultural historians engaged in any study focusing on the years 1789-1799 in France."-European Studies Journal
EMMET KENNEDY is Professor of European History at the George Washington University./ee is author of A Cultural History of the French Revolution, A Philosophe in the Age of Revolution: Destutt de Tracy and the Origins of 'Ideology', and coeditor of The Shaping of Modern France: Writings on French History Since 1715. MARIE-LAURENCE NETTER is researcher at the Centre de Recherches Historiques, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. In addition to numerous articles on education, theatre, and the French Revolution, she is author of La Rvolution francaise n'est pas termine. JAMES P. McGREGOR is senior policy officer at the Office of Policy, United States Information Agency. He is author of numerous articles on Eastern Europe, Slavic studies, and political science. MARK V. OLSEN is assistant director of the ARTFL Project at the University of Chicago. He is author of numerous articles on French history and computer science.