From Appomattox to Montmartre: Americans and the Paris Commune

Couverture
Harvard University Press, 1998 - 274 pages

The American Civil War and the Paris Commune of 1871, Philip Katz argues, were part of the broader sweep of transatlantic development in the mid-nineteenth century--an age of democratic civil wars. Katz shows how American political culture in the period that followed the Paris Commune was shaped by that event.

The telegraph, the new Atlantic cable, and the news-gathering experience gained in the Civil War transformed the Paris Commune into an American national event. News from Europe arrived in fragments, however, and was rarely cohesive and often contradictory. Americans were forced to assimilate the foreign events into familiar domestic patterns, most notably the Civil War. Two ways of Americanizing the Commune emerged: descriptive (recasting events in American terms in order to better understand them) and predictive (preoccupation with whether Parisian unrest might reproduce itself in the United States).

By 1877, the Commune became a symbol for the domestic labor unrest that culminated in the Great Railroad Strike of that year. As more powerful local models of social unrest emerged, however, the Commune slowly disappeared as an active force in American culture.

 

Table des matières

The Two Civil Wars of General Cluseret
4
La Colonie Américaine
26
First Impressions
44
Ripples across the Atlantic
61
Party Section
85
The View from the 1870s
118
Apocalypse Where? Apocalypse When?
142
That Once Dreaded Institution
184
Appendixes
195
Novels and Plays about the Paris Commune
201
Notes
207
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (1998)

Philip M. Katz is Assistant Director of Research for the American Association of Museums

Informations bibliographiques