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Années de crises : le massacre de Peterloo en Grande-Bretagne et dans le monde

Sippel Alexandra, Rogers Rachel
Publication date 25/11/2022
EAN: 9782810712236
Availability Available from publisher
Ce volume rassemble des articles en anglais et en français qui proposent de nouvelles approches des années qui ont suivi le massacre de Peterloo en 1819, période d’effervescence intellectuelle et militante par et vis-à-vis des ouvriers en Grande-Bret... See full description
Attribute nameAttribute value
Common books attribute
PublisherPU MIDI
Page Count364
Languagefr
AuthorSippel Alexandra, Rogers Rachel
FormatBook
Product typeBook
Publication date25/11/2022
Weight581 g
Dimensions (thickness x width x height)2.20 x 16.00 x 24.20 cm
Peterloo 1819 and After: Perspectives from Britain and Beyond
Ce volume rassemble des articles en anglais et en français qui proposent de nouvelles approches des années qui ont suivi le massacre de Peterloo en 1819, période d’effervescence intellectuelle et militante par et vis-à-vis des ouvriers en Grande-Bretagne et dans le monde. The massacre at St Peter’s Field in Manchester on 16th August 1819, when a peaceful meeting for democratic reform, attended by men, women and children from the surrounding Lancashire villages, was suppressed by force, was a significant event in the history of British popular radicalism. It precipitated the decline of the ‘mass platform’ movement which had grown after the end of the Napoleonic Wars and galvanized the last acts of an ultra-radical revolutionary fringe in its last throes by 1820. ‘Peterloo’, as it became known, also had repercussions and echoes in a wider European, colonial and international framework, crystalising, as it did, questions of freedom, oppression and representation. This volume in English and French brings together a collection of new and diverse approaches to this period, and broadly seeks to understand some of the wider implications of Peterloo and its aftermath, as well as question anew its domestic significance over the course of 1819 and 1820.