Table Of ContentList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Prologue 1. The Memory of a Tyrant 2. The Revolutionary Revealed 3. Representative of the People 4. Robespierre the Orator 5. The War Debates 6. Conversion to Insurrection 7. The King's Trial 8. Purging the Convention 9. Robespierre the Ideologue 10. The Committee of Public Safety 11. A Mortal Blow to Fanaticism 12. Thermidor 13. The Incorruptible Epilogue Appendix: Portraits of Robespierre Notes List of Works Cited Index
SynopsisAs it changed forever the political landscape of the modern world, the French Revolution was driven by a new type of personality: the confirmed, self-aware revolutionary. Maximilien Robespierre originated the role and embodied its ideological essence and extremes; the self that he projected to the people was equated with the ideals for which he strove. In creating this intellectual biography of so enigmatic a figure, David Jordan has stressed the words of the man about himself. With great imagination and insight, Jordan places Robespierre's self-conceptualization within the context of events and explains how Robespierre "The Incorruptible"-a man seen by contemporaries as virtuous-could not only equate justice with vengeance and demand it of the people, but also stand as its symbol before the world., As it changed forever the political landscape of the modern world, the French Revolution was driven by a new type of personality: the confirmed, self-aware revolutionary. Maximilien Robespierre originated the role and embodied its ideological essence and extremes; the self that he projected to the people was equated with the ideals for which he strove. In creating this intellectual biography of so enigmatic a figure, David Jordan has stressed the words of the man about himself. With great imagination and insight, Jordan places Robespierre's self-conceptualization within the context of events and explains how Robespierre "The Incorruptible"--a man seen by contemporaries as virtuous--could not only equate justice with vengeance and demand it of the people, but also stand as its symbol before the world.