Rumors of Revolution: Song, Sentiment, and Sedition in Colonial Louisiana by Tsien, Jennifer (9780813949628) | Browns Books
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Rumors of Revolution: Song, Sentiment, and Sedition in Colonial Louisiana

Part of the Writing the Early Americas series
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In 1682 the French explorer René-Robert Cavelier de La Salle claimed the Mississippi River basin for France, naming the region Louisiana to honor his king, Louis XIV. Until the United States acquired the territory in the Louisiana Purchase more than a century later, there had never been a revolution, per se, in Louisiana. However, as Jennifer Tsien highlights in this groundbreaking work, revolutionary sentiment clearly surfaced in the literature and discourse both in the Louisiana colony and in France with dramatic and far-reaching consequences.

In Rumors of Revolution, Tsien analyzes documented observations made in Paris and in New Orleans about the exercise of royal power over French subjects and colonial Louisiana stories that laid bare the arbitrary powers and abuses that the government could exert on its people against their will. Ultimately, Tsien establishes an implicit connection between histories of settler colonialism in the Americas and the fate of absolutism in Europe that has been largely overlooked in scholarship to date.

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Product Details
University of Virginia Press
0813949629 / 9780813949628
eBook (EPUB)
976.302
08/05/2023
English
248 pages
152 x 229 mm
Copy: 10%; print: 10%

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