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Liberty: The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France [Paperback]

Lucy Moore
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Book Description

26 Aug 2011

The bestselling author of ‘Maharanis’ recreates the lives of six remarkable women who, in a time of violent revolution, leapt at the chance to exercise their considerable charm, intelligence and acumen, and make their mark on history.

Germaine de Stael was an intellectual and an aristocrat, equally obsessed by politics and love affairs, who is said to have helped write the 1791 Constitution. Her fellow salonnière, Mme Roland, was a bourgeois housewife who became a fervent and influential revolutionary, until Robespierre’s regime sent her to the guillotine.

While female intellectuals sipped wine in their salons, their working class counterparts patrolled the streets of Paris with pistols in their belts. Theroigne de Mericourt was an ill-treated mistress when she fell in love with revolutionary ideals and became an ardent anti-royalist until a mob beating by ‘sans-culottes’ ended her activism. The mob in question was made up of members of the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women, whose founder, Pauline Leon, agitated for women's rights.

After the sans-culottes came the 'sans-chemises' – the glamorous (often skimpily clad) merveilleuses. Decadent Theresia Tallien combined sexual license with the secular amorality of the new Republic and reportedly helped engineer Robespierre's downfall. Her only rival for beauty was Juliette Recamier, whose elegance made her salons the most sought-after in Paris. When she refused Napoleon’s advances she was exiled from the city until his fall.

Writing with vigour and passion, Lucy Moore reanimates these witty salonnières, fervent citoyennes and glittering merveilleuses to illuminate the brief, hopeful period in which the Revolution seemed to offer them the freedom they craved – and the ways in which it failed.



Product details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial (26 Aug 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 000720602X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007206025
  • Product Dimensions: 13 x 19.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 230,516 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

‘This book is excellent…Moore seems to have that rare gift of making a work both scholarly and yet as readable as a thriller.’ Julian Fellowes

‘A fascinating spectrum of female experience inside the Revolution and among the ruins it left behind… “Liberty” is extremely elegant and thought provoking…In mapping these six varied and overlapping lives, Moore vividly reminds us of the immense struggle there has been to establish political rights for women.’ Daily Telegraph

‘Lively, well-researched…it is no small task to bring together six such different lives against a historical background of rapid and complicated change but Lucy Moore has done it with skill and brio.’ Sunday Telegraph

Daily Telegraph

'Lucy Moore tells these stories with great agility...Nothing escapes her canny eye.'


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
An interesting book that focused on the lives, impact and experiences of six women during the French Revolution. The narrative started with the fall of the Ancien Régime and ended with the rise of the Empire under Napoleon. The six women used as examples for the different kind of impact the revolution could have on lives were Théroigne de Méricourt, Germaine de Staël, Manon Roland, Thérésia Tallien, Julia Récamier, and Pauline Léon. Major knowledge of the revolutionary period is not needed to enjoy this book.

There is a strong focus on how the French Revolution denied woman many of the basic rights men gained under the flag of French republicanism whilst demanding they also mount the guillotine for the same penalties as men. As the French Revolution is often pictured as a great liberation it was very interesting to view the denial of these basic human rights to women, who played a big role in the revolution at many key points. The author highlighted this though provoking issue very well. The book focused on women from different classes and political sentiments to get a good and varied mix, which I really liked. I also enjoyed the little facts about the woman and life in revolutionary France that I didn't know before. I found the book good for extending my knowledge for things like women's clothing and the importance of dress during revolutionary France for instance. I found it to be a highly readable book and the information was easy to process.

However the book did pay more attention to the more famous of the woman, like Thérésia Tallien and Germaine de Staël, probably due to the lack of sources on woman like Pauline Léon. Instead of Julia Récamier I felt that someone like Joséphine de Beauharnais could have been included, apart the few mentions in relation to Thérésia, as Joséphine had more of an impact on French society going in to the period Julia is used to illustrate. Especially as Julia's section felt slightly tacked the end of the book, compared to the long sections on Thérésia or Germaine. Sometimes the author assumed thoughts of the various woman in the book which could be presented practically as fact, something I don't like in non-faction no matter how probable. I would have liked more information on women like Lucy du Tour du Pin as her memoirs are used a lot in the book as sources, and it is never established at the end definitively what happened to her. The fates of woman like Pauline Léon and especially Théroigne de Méricourt's sad end are brushed over and summed up in a sentence or two, which I thought could have been addressed more thoroughly. Also there were so many wonderful descriptions in the book of paintings and jewellery I would have liked to see more of them make it into the book but this is more a spacing issue then anything else. To end the focus was, again most likely due to sources, on the more extraordinary women rather then on ordinary French women and I would have like to glimpse a bit more of that world over the glittering worlds of Thérésia or Germaine and the highly political worlds of Théroigne or Manon.

I would recommend this for people interested in woman's rights and the French Revolution, as it is a informative and engrossing read.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Livlely and thoughtprovoking biography 25 Sep 2008
Format:Paperback
This biography is one of the best I ever read. Written with insight and passion the lives of these six women shouts to us from the past. I read the book in 2 days, and it reads like a thriller. At the end I felt sad to say goodbye to these interesting, passionate and intelligent women. The book gave me a new understanding of the french revolution concerning women, their participation, hopes and dissapointment.
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  1 review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling 25 Feb 2008
By Iris - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is an excellent read for anyone interested in the female experience of the French Revolution. As the author and some of her subjects point out in the book the Revolution's cries for human rights and freedoms did not extend to women. I hadn't realized the Revolution was such a chauvinistic enterprise. Though women were denied the rights of citizens under the new Republic they were still made to suffer it's worst punishments, sometimes purely for their associations with personal enemies of people like Robespierre.

The author looks at the evolution of France's Revolution through the lives of six women. The most famous are Germaine de Stael, doyenne of the salon, and Theresia Tallien embodiment of decadent Directory society. She begins with Germaine de Stael and a description of the fall of the ancien regime. The Revolution starts out with a liberal idealism that degenerates into the fatal Terror of 1793. The author does an excellent job of illuminating the downward slide of people's hopes, especially those of Manon Roland. Her narrative culminates with the rise of Napoleon and the Empire.

This is a fascinating look at a turbulent time. I was left wondering about the Revolution--what was the point? One dictator (the King) was overthrown for another (the Jacobin Club and Robespierre), and then another (Napoleon). Women's rights were never seriously addressed by any of the supposed Republicans. In some ways women (primarily of the upper classes) were better off under the king.

I highly recommend this for anyone interested in the French Revolution or women's issues.
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