Power and politics in old régime France, 1720–1745.
By Peter R. Campbell. London:
Routledge, 1996. Pp. xii+420. ISBN 0-415-06333-7. £50.
Antoine Lavoisier: science, administration, revolution. By
A. Donovan. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. xvi+351.
ISBN 0-521-56218-x. £40. 0-521-56672-x. £14.95 (pb).
Officers, nobles and revolutionaries: essays on eighteenth-century
France. By W. Doyle. London:
Hambledon Press, 1995. Pp. xii+238. ISBN 1-85285-121-x. £35.
Venality: the sale of offices in eighteenth-century France.
By W. Doyle. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1996. Pp. xviii+343. ISBN 0-19-820536-8. £45.
The bakers of Paris and the bread question, 1700–1775.
By S. L. Kaplan. Durham, NC, and
London: Duke University Press, 1996. Pp. xviii+261. ISBN 08223-1706-0.
£47.50.
Montesquieu and the Parlement of Bordeaux. By R. Kingston.
Geneva: Droz, 1996. Pp. 329.
ISBN 2-600-00161-1. £30.
Class and state in ancien régime France: the road to modernity?
By David Parker. London:
Routledge, 1996. Pp. xvii+349. ISBN 0-415-13647-4. £40.
The books analysed in this review bear witness in different ways to
a revival of
historians' interest in the political history of ancien
régime France which was highlighted
by Peter Campbell in a recent review article in this journal. Campbell
speculated that
what Fernand Braudel all-so-dismissively called
‘event history’ (l'histoire événementielle)
was making a comeback at the expense of Annaliste
geo-historical analysis in the longue
durée mode or mid-term conjunctural history rooted in social
and economic change. A
complementary way of looking at the phenomenon, which strikes the reader
on
engaging with the present crop of works, is to see current historiographical
interests in
political history as the revenge of Alfred Cobban, progenitor in the 1950s
and 1960s of
famous revisionist attacks on the socio-economic analyses of the Jacobino–Marxist
school of French Revolutionary historiography adorned by Mathiez, Lefebvre,
and
Soboul. Cobban's broadsides were aimed not simply at some of the conceptual
apparatus of the ‘Marxists’, but also sought to highlight empirical
research as a
corrosive solvent of what he viewed as the deterministic hyperbole of politically-influenced left-wing history.