Alyssa Sepinwall explores the historiography of slavery and the Francophone world before the "Haitian Turn" in her essay. @thesfhs https://t.co/MAhwD1QRrv
The CFP for the upcoming Consoetium on the Revolutionary Era, 1750-1850 has an extended deadline for submission of December 1! Send us your proposals! https://t.co/z6bqdfQeNU
CRE is a delight. Fascinating and well-researched papers, lively roundtables, and one of the most friendly and supportive atmospheres you’ll find. I highly recommend submitting a paper. I’ll see you there!
The Consortium on the Revolutionary Era is happy to share our 2025 CALL FOR PAPERS 🎉! The conference will be held from Thursday, Feb 27 to Sunday, March 2 at @AuburnU! Share widely! https://t.co/5neC4tsGiL
Gender, ethnicity, & revolutionary identities clash in the story of Jane Erin Emmet, according to historian Hannah Nolan. Click to read about the ways Emmet navigated such a complex early American world. https://t.co/ucj34OcpcO
With the Fall 2024 semester about to begin, Peter Walker @Schism_Shop reminds us to teach students the dangers of teleology. Read to learn how he helps students come to this realization in the classroom. https://t.co/zUAlqQuurT
"Dispelling the Shadows of Shame and Victimhood: Susan P. Conner on the Complexities of Marginalized Women in Eighteenth-Century Revolutionary France" by Rosamond Hooper-Hamersley @ConsortiumRev https://t.co/G30XavDjmf
Next up for the @ConsortiumRev's Selected Papers is @colinrmathison's "From Subjects to Citizens: The West Florida Revolt in the Age of Revolutions"! https://t.co/mGQdlf4bOO
Revolutionary symbols provided later revolutionaries with a way to communicate certain goals, Guiseppe Perelli argues, but they were also regularly appropriated for other, perhaps, less ideological purposes too. https://t.co/N4u3Ek6ad4
In the recent issue of @FrenchHistoryJ, Charles Walton and Cathy McClive edited an issue in honor of Colin Jones. The three of them met to discuss the issue, Jones's life as a historian, and the future of the field. https://t.co/UTU4bxU5hW
Alex Belovsky explores how memory forms after battle in our next essay from the Selected Papers of the @ConsortiumRev , entitled "Bringing Order Out of Chaos." https://t.co/jgv5stfh5y
We've got another great one from the Selected Papers of the @ConsortiumRev! See Mark C. Hamel's "The Roussillon Campaign of 1793-94: Spain's Lost Opportunity" https://t.co/wMNbSyEdjM
The republican ideal for women replicated Old Regime limitations on women and their agency. @CorinneGressang is up next from the Selected Papers of the @ConsortiumRev! https://t.co/l6rjkk2AyK
Next up from @ConsortiumRev's Selected Papers is @tlecaque's "Praying The Holy War: The Bishop of Quebec, the Mandements, and the Seven Years’ War in New France" https://t.co/sdnTdWJVJL
Next up from @ConsortiumRev's Selected Papers is Wayne Hanley's paper on the complicated legacy of Michel Ney, a critical figure of the Napoleonic wars and one whose legacy is fraught. https://t.co/093nU2jfNS
AoR is happy to publish the first paper from the @ConsortiumRev's Selected Papers (2023).
"Blood Drinker Kerblay and a French Émigré Network in South Carolina" by Suzanne Krebsbach https://t.co/V7zpJZc6hK
"The Black Cockade and the Tricolor: Space and Place in New York City’s Responses to the French Revolution" by @RapportMike
Published in conjunction with the Commission internationale d’histoire de la Révolution française (CIHRF) https://t.co/ilbubIHJ1t