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Kwartalnik Historyczny

Popular Justice or Why Were There No Sans-Culottes in America?
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  • Popular Justice or Why Were There No Sans-Culottes in America?
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Popular Justice or Why Were There No Sans-Culottes in America?

Auteurs

  • Paweł T. Dobrowolski Collegium Civitas, Warsaw

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.12775/KH.2017.124.SI.1.02

Mots-clés

Revolution, Boston, Paris, massacre, Bastille, violence

Résumé

The article applies a comparative perspective to assess the onset of the two ‘successful’ eighteen-century revolutions – the American and the French. The Boston events of March 1770 are compared with those of Paris in July 1789: in both cases ‘the people’ faced the soldiers, riots and politically generated violence led to bloodshed, but the subsequent actions of the insurgents showed a marked difference in understanding the sense of justice and the ways of promoting revolutionary discourse. Boston patriots relied on the English-based system of common law, were ready to condemn their own radicals and did not wish plebeian justice to prevail. They hoped for a perestroika, not for a revolution. The French – finding no culprits to condemn, and having as of yet no legal institutions of their own to use – were willing to disregard the legal continuity of the state and to search for more radical solutions.

Biographie de l'auteur

Paweł T. Dobrowolski, Collegium Civitas, Warsaw

Paweł T. Dobrowolski, PhD. – professor of international studies in the Collegium Civitas, Warsaw, head of Sociology, Political and International Studies Department, PhD (1983) Institute of History, Polish Academy of Sciences, habilitationshrift (1998), former diplomat (ambassador to Canada 2000, Cyprus 2009), field of interest: eighteenth-century Britain

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Kwartalnik Historyczny

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Publiée

2017-11-02

Comment citer

1.
DOBROWOLSKI, Paweł T. Popular Justice or Why Were There No Sans-Culottes in America?. Kwartalnik Historyczny. Online. 2 novembre 2017. Vol. 124, no. 1, pp. 39-77. [Accessed 14 mai 2025]. DOI 10.12775/KH.2017.124.SI.1.02.
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