Description
A major history of French society between the end of the Middle Ages and the Revolution.
About the Author
William Beik is Emeritus Professor of History at Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia. His previous publications include Urban Protest in Seventeenth-Century France: The Culture of Retribution (1997) and Louis XIV and Absolutism: A Study with Documents (2000).
Reviews
'William Beik culminates his years of scholarship with a stunning picture of the social groupings, political dynamics, beliefs and customary practices of early modern France. We look at France from its provinces and its center, we see it through the eyes of peasants, townsfolk, and nobles. We savor the difference between its village tax-payers, its enterprising tax-collectors, and its sumptuously supported king and his courtiers. Especially, Beik gives us a lucid analysis of how the whole political and social system worked, its tensions and means of equilibrium, its sources of resistance and renewal. By the end we understand both the self-congratulation of the French elite and the deep dissatisfaction that led to revolution.' Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto and author of Society and Culture in Early Modern France
'Drawing on a lifetime engagement with the subject, William Beik has written a masterly analysis of early modern France. He combines an eye for gritty detail and out-of-the-way examples drawn from ordinary lives with an informed grasp of the key questions which puzzle historians. The result is an exemplary survey, which students and scholars at all levels will warmly appreciate.' Colin Jones, Queen Mary University of London author of The Great Nation: France 1715-99
'William Beik, one of the preeminent historians of early modern times, offers here a remarkable synthesis of two generations of early modern French historiography. Beik's highly readable and comprehensive text integrates contemporary scholarship on French cultural history with the social history insights of the great Annalistes, showing us how to tether cultural and political developments to their social base. The French have the perfect word for it: incontournable.' James Collins, Georgetown University and author of The State in Early Modern France
'Aimed squarely at advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students, as well as those looking for a thorough and reliable introduction to the past several decades of scholarship, A Social and Cultural History of Early Modern France, provides a thoughtful, well-written, and consistently engaging synthesis of a prodigious amount of scholarship on a vast array of topics.' H-France, www.h-france.net
Awards
Winner of Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2009.
Book Information
ISBN 9780521709569
Author William Beik
Format Paperback
Page Count 420
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 670g
Dimensions(mm) 228mm * 153mm * 21mm