The End(s) of Revolution
Symposium
Howard Brown, Laurent Dubois, Jill Lepore,
April 25, 2014
2:00-5:00pm Mandel G03News
Announcing Caribbean Newspapers, 1718-1876: From the American Antiquarian Society
Tags
- American Revolution
- Art of Americas
- captain america
- charlotte smith
- citizen
- citizenship
- Civil War
- counter-revolution
- Counterrevolution
- Definition
- definitions
- french revolution
- gender
- haitian constitution
- Haitian Revolution
- helen maria williams
- Historiography
- ideology
- julia douthwaite
- literature
- madame roland
- marie-olympe de gouges
- mary wollstonecraft
- material culture
- MFA
- Narrative
- Politics
- primary sources
- print culture
- representation
- Revolution
- robespierre
- sensibility
- sentimental novel
- sophia rosenfeld
- Sources
- Subjectivity
- terror
- the public sphere
- Threads in the Age of Revolution
- Toussaint Louverture
- traitors
- treason
- William Wordsworth
- Women
Tag Archives: William Wordsworth
“To Toussaint L’Ouverture” as an Elegy
William Wordsworth’s “To Toussaint L’Ouverture” is one of the frequently discussed literary works in the historical writings on the Age of Revolution. One can easily see why: ostensibly making a hero of Toussaint Louverture, the most prominent revolutionary during the … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Haitian Revolution, literature, representation, Toussaint Louverture, William Wordsworth
5 Comments