Enlightenment’s Errand Boy
David A. Bell: The Philosophes and the Republic of Letters, 22 May 2003
Calvet’s Web: Enlightenment and the Republic of Letters in 18th-Century France
by L.W.B. Brockliss.
Oxford, 471 pp., £55, July 2002,9780199247486 Show More
by L.W.B. Brockliss.
Oxford, 471 pp., £55, July 2002,
The Great Nation: France from Louis XV to Napoleon
by Colin Jones.
Allen Lane, 651 pp., £25, August 2002,0 7139 9039 2 Show More
by Colin Jones.
Allen Lane, 651 pp., £25, August 2002,
“... The French Revolutionaries identified the Enlightenment as the work of a small, brave band of 18th-century philosophes, whom they rushed to entomb as heroes in the gloomy crypt of the Panthéon. In the corrupt and desolate wasteland of the Ancien Régime, the Revolutionaries proclaimed, the philosophes had cast welcoming rays of light and reason, stirring the dull roots of popular discontent ... ”