The Revolutionary Self

Social Change and the Emergence of the Modern Individual, 1770-1800

25 March 2025

Territory Rights — Worldwide.

Lynn Hunt (Author)

Description

An illuminating exploration of the tensions between self and society in the age of revolutions

The eighteenth century was a time of cultural friction: individuals began to assert greater independence and there was a new emphasis on social equality. In this surprising history, Lynn Hunt examines women’s expanding societal roles, such as using tea to facilitate conversation between the sexes in Britain. In France, women also pushed boundaries by becoming artists, and printmakers’ satiric takes on the elite gave the lower classes a chance to laugh at the upper classes and imagine the potential of political upheaval. Hunt also explores how promotion in French revolutionary armies was based on men’s singular capabilities, rather than noble blood, and how the invention of financial instruments such as life insurance and national debt related to a changing idea of national identity. Wide-ranging and thought-provoking, The Revolutionary Self is a fascinating exploration of the conflict between individualism and the group ties that continues to shape our lives today.

Also By: Lynn Hunt View all by author...

  • Writing History in the Global Era

    Lynn Hunt

    Paperback, 2015

    With history in ferment, leading historian Lynn Hunt rethinks why history matters and how it should be written.
  • Writing History in the Global Era

    Lynn Hunt

    Hardback, 2014

    With history in ferment, leading historian Lynn Hunt rethinks why history matters and how it should be written.
  • Writing History in the Global Era

    Lynn Hunt

    E Book, 2014

    With history in ferment, leading historian Lynn Hunt rethinks why history matters and how it should be written.
  • Telling the Truth about History

    Joyce Appleby, Lynn Hunt, Margaret Jacob

    E Book, 2011

    "A fascinating historiographical essay. . . . An unusually lucid and inclusive explication of what it ultimately at stake in the culture wars over the nature, goals, and efficacy of history as a...
  • Inventing Human Rights: A History

    Lynn Hunt

    Paperback, 2008

    “A tour de force.”—Gordon S. Wood, New York Times Book Review

Hardback

9781324079033

160 x 236 mm • 208 pages

£25.00

Add to Basket

Ebook

9781324079040

Powered by Glassboxx

£25.00

Coming Soon