An uncorseted installment of the Durants' Story of Civilization. The book's account of the Revolution is its finest...

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THE AGE OF NAPOLEON: A History of European Civilization from 1789 to 1815

An uncorseted installment of the Durants' Story of Civilization. The book's account of the Revolution is its finest accomplishment; men, forces and stages are deafly delineated, and despite the authors' fatuous sympathy for the royal family, the Terror is justly presented as a necessity of war. The Durants' explanation of Thermidor--""the bourgeoisie triumphed because it had more money and brains than either the aristocrats or the plebs""--exemplifies the general flavor of the book. Though we learn about Louis XVI's foreskin, Napoleon's dog bite at the moment of first marital climax, Beethoven's liver problems, and the hemorrhoids of Byron's mistress, more integrated aspects of personality are not neglected. The Durants convey a sense of how Napoleon constructed a social and political framework suited to capitalist development, and identify the highlights of European science during this period. The ""intellectual history"" per se remains weak, for example when Fichte's 1800 treatise, The Closed Commercial State, is tagged ""socialist."" Apart from the tantalizing sops to the idle intellect, it may well spur further reading on the subject, a merit not to be dismissed.

Pub Date: Nov. 3, 1975

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 1975

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