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Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man": A Biography (Books That Shook the World)
 
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Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man": A Biography (Books That Shook the World) (Hardcover)

by Christopher Hitchens (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 158 pages
  • Publisher: Atlantic Books (13 Jul 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1843545136
  • ISBN-13: 978-1843545132
  • Product Dimensions: 20 x 13 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 241,629 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Review
O rare Tom Paine! Prolific political pundit Hitchens (God Is Not Great, 2007, etc.) sizes up the "self-taught corset-maker and bridge-designer" who fomented rebellion across the world two centuries ago.Paine's Rights of Man - the ostensible center of this entry in Atlantic's Books That Changed the World series - was, writes Hitchens, "both a trumpet of inspiration and a carefully wrought blueprint for a more rational and decent ordering of society," as well as "an attempt to marry the ideas of the American and French Revolutions" with the aim of introducing them to Britain. Of course, America and France found manifold ways to shake off revolutionary rationality, and Paine quickly found himself a prophet without honor, even if William Pitt allowed that Paine was of course right. (Pitt added, though, that to encourage Paine's opinions would be to invite revolution indeed.) Antimonarchical but at once radical and conservative - for instance, Paine "often wrote of economic inequalities as if they were natural or inevitable," and he resisted the atheism of the French Revolution - Rights of Man asserted a few contradictions and foreshadowed, in some ways, the notion of a dictatorship of the proletariat, but it also pressed for a certain wide-ranging species of liberty, against which Hitchens contrasts Edmund Burke, whose own ideas of equality and liberty turned on the presence of a hereditary king. Paine's vigorous and plain prose, Hitchens observes, has been taken as evidence of an uncouth nature, but Paine's ideas were elevated, and of course widely influential - reverberating, in time, in the labor movement, women's suffrage and Franklin Roosevelt's famous speech after Pearl Harbor. Paine, as Hitchens notes in this lucid and fast-moving appreciation, has no proper memorial anywhere; this slender book makes a good start.Less exuberant than Tom Collins's essential book The Trouble with Tom (2005). Still, as with all Hitchens, well worth reading and arguing with. (Kirkus Reviews)

Product Description
Traces the history of "The Rights of Man" from the publication of Part One in 1791 in London and its rapturous reception across the Atlantic. This book analyses the meaning it has acquired since its creation and its significance as the cornerstone of contemporary debates about our basic human rights.

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14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful mental exercise for those who love freedom, 24 Oct 2006
By Theodore A. Rushton (PHOENIX, Arizona United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   

Everyone who loves freedom will adore this book.

Buy it. You don't need to read further. Buy it, you'll love it. But, if you're a masochist willing to submit yourself to my views, read on. Then buy it.

This is Hitchens at his best; a chronic kicker who thinks he's clever and would dearly love to be the Tom Paine of today. He's writing about a genuine soulmate; both men are champions of the chaos of change and the beauty of unrestrained libertarianism. Hitchens understands Paine, because he's a carbon copy of his hero -- tenth carbon, perhaps, but nonetheless a genuine copycat. This is Hitchens at his best.

It's delightful because it makes you think. It doesn't matter if Hitchens is right or wrong. What matters is that every reader will finish this book with a greater and profound understanding of the freedom that was bursting out in the 1750-1848 era. It's my view that revolution is 90 percent fluff and fury; Paine was the 'Dallas cheerleader' in charge of fluff for the American Revolution, with the added bonus of a doctoral dissertation on freedom in 'Common Sense'.

Hitchens astutely quotes Madame Roland who described Paine as ". . . better at lighting the way for revolution than drafting a constitution . . . or the day-to-day work of a legislator". True enough. But, take away Paine, and the Revolution would have lost its most enthusiastic and articulate voice. The eventual US government was invented by Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, Madison and the like; but, without Paine they might never have had the opportunity to invent a new government.

Paine and Hitchens can be grievously wrong, such as attacking hereditary institutions. By their standards, the plebian roots of Hitler and Stalin would make them two of the greatest men of the past century. By the same standard, Roosevelt and Churchill, both leaders with rich hereditary backgrounds, would be two of the worst.

So? Those issues are nitpicking trivialities. Paine is justly one of the major figures of the American Revolution because of 'Common Sense'. This was no flash-in-the-pan of inspired genius; Hitchens eloquently outlines the scope of Paine's reasoning and ideals in 'The Rights of Man' which is the central theme of this book. It takes a soulmate to fully understand Paine, and Hitchens is that man. He's a shadow of Paine's intellect; but, better to be a shadow than a spotlight that misses its mark.

If you read no other Hitchens, read this one book. If you read everything else of Hitchens, this book will surprise you for its intelligence. No writer (or reviewer) can be irrelevant all the time. This book is relevance at its best, first-rate reading in a time of an "imperial presidency" which leaves the wildest fantasies of King George III as amusing pecadillos.

Buy it. You didn't need to read this far. Buy it, you'll love it. If you're intelligent, you'll thumb through it again and again, underlining, noting, highlighting, thinking. If you're not intelligent, you'll think Hitchens is brilliant. Whatever. Buy it.

(Hopefully, someone is at work on an equivalent cogent concise analysis of 'Reflections on the Revolution in France' by Edmund Burke.)


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13 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars an inaccurate book that adds nothing new, 31 Jan 2007
By Mp Luthy (Bristol, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
hitchens has taken the vast majority of his info from john keane's biography, and he has done it with many errors.
most infuriatingly he doesn't include any discussion on the impact both parts of Rights of Man had in the UK, perhaps in targetting an american audience he has left out the reaction of the country the book was written for.
the introduction to my penguin copy of rights of man proves to be far more informative and well researched.
the only upside of this book, if its a quality you seek, is that it is a light read.
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11 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Harveys Ale, 19 Jun 2007
By Mr. B. Quinnell "barryquinnell" (Sussex, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Harveys of Sussex brew a beer called Thomas Paine, what better recommendation, "great bloke, great beer" down with religion
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