Invisible Code – Honor & Sentiment in Postrevolutioanry France 1814 – 1848 - Hardcover

Reddy, William M

 
9780520205369: Invisible Code – Honor & Sentiment in Postrevolutioanry France 1814 – 1848

Synopsis

Starting from the premise that private feelings cannot be contained or eliminated from public deliberation or action, this text embarks on an inquiry into the influence of honour on behaviour in 19th-century France. It considers how French society was goverend by a strict code of honour and that males in particular were vunerable to acute feelings of shame, while any other feelings referred to as "sentiment" were considered the special domain of women. Examining the realms of both marriage and the public sphere, the author uncovers the feelings of shame and self-esteem, fear and desire, that entered in an unperceived yet fundamental way into the sense of self that many elite men and women worked out in the course of their lives.

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About the Author

William M. Reddy is Professor of History and Cultural Anthropology at Duke University and author of The Rise of Market Culture: The Textile Trade and French Society (1984), and Money and Liberty in Modern Europe: A Critique of Historical Understanding (1987).

From the Back Cover

"The Invisible Code is a carefully researched and methodologically ambitious work. Professor Reddy gives us a great deal to think about through his vivid accounts of marital conflict, journalistic confrontations, and workplace humiliation in Balzac's Paris: He argues convincingly that the records of these "ordinary" dramas can give the attentive historian access to the feelings of those involved, and that those feelings are fodder for historical analysis. While demonstrating that the collapse of Old Regime corporate institutions made way for the rise of a powerful, but invisible, code of honor in public life, Reddy challenges us to integrate the power of subjective, individual emotion into our understanding of the nature and transformation of public cultures."—Sarah Maza, author of Private Lives and Public Affairs

From the Inside Flap

"The Invisible Code is a carefully researched and methodologically ambitious work. Professor Reddy gives us a great deal to think about through his vivid accounts of marital conflict, journalistic confrontations, and workplace humiliation in Balzac's Paris: He argues convincingly that the records of these "ordinary" dramas can give the attentive historian access to the feelings of those involved, and that those feelings are fodder for historical analysis. While demonstrating that the collapse of Old Regime corporate institutions made way for the rise of a powerful, but invisible, code of honor in public life, Reddy challenges us to integrate the power of subjective, individual emotion into our understanding of the nature and transformation of public cultures."—Sarah Maza, author of Private Lives and Public Affairs

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