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II.8 - That France Was the Country Where People Had Become Most Alike

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jon Elster
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Arthur Goldhammer
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
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Summary

Anyone who examines Ancien Régime France closely will come away with two quite different images.

At times it seems that everyone who lived there, particularly those who occupied the middle and upper regions of society – the only ones visible to us – was exactly like everyone else.

Yet within this uniform multitude there remained an astonishing variety of small barriers, which divided the multitude into many different parts, and within each of these enclaves there emerged something like a separate society, which was concerned only with its own interests and did not take part in the life of the whole.

When I think of this almost infinite division and reflect on the fact that nowhere else were citizens less prepared to act in common and help one another out in a time of crisis than in France, I can understand how a great revolution was able to turn such a society upside down in an instant. I can imagine all those little barriers overturned by the great upheaval itself. And when I do this, I immediately see a social body perhaps more compact and homogeneous than the world has ever known.

I have explained how the distinctive life of the various provinces throughout the kingdom had long since been snuffed out. This contributed greatly to making all the French quite similar to one another. Despite persistent diversities, the unity of the nation was already transparent. The uniformity of legislation makes this clear.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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