Lafayette in Two Worlds
Public Cultures and Personal Identities in an Age of Revolutions
By Lloyd S. Kramer
368 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 30 illus., notes, bibl., index
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Paperback ISBN: 978-0-8078-4818-0
Published: February 1999 -
E-book EPUB ISBN: 978-0-8078-6267-4
Published: November 2000 -
E-book PDF ISBN: 979-8-8908-7873-1
Published: November 2000
Buy this Book
- Paperback $42.50
- E-Book $29.99
Awards & distinctions
1998 Annibel Jenkins Biography Prize, American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
1996 Gilbert Chinard Prize, Society for French Historical Studies
About the Author
Lloyd Kramer is Dean Smith Distinguished Term Professor and chair of the history department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His books include Threshold of a New World: Intellectuals and the Exile Experience in Paris, 1830-1848 and Nationalism: Political Cultures in Europe and America, 1775-1865.
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Reviews
"A valuable book."—Journal of the Early Republic
"Kramer successfully mixes the biography of one of Europe’s most colorful figures with an insightful and gracefully written analysis of political culture during one of European history’s most exciting epochs."—Literature and Culture
"Kramer’s sophisticated interpretation is highly readable as well as suggestive of ways in which important individuals both reflect and illuminate the cultures of their times."—The Historian
"An intriguing effort to rescue the image of the quintessential traditional historical subject, the 'great man,' has come from a self-consciously postmodern historian. Kramer achieves his goal by creating a 'cubist' biography of Gilbert du Motier de Lafayette. . . . Kramer has provided not only a work useful to French and intellectual historians, but also a methodology that others will find attractive."—CHOICE
"Lloyd Kramer's innovative study is neither a biography nor the history of a symbol. . . . He examines the hero of two worlds as both a life and a text, and he finds in the relationship between the two some missing links in the history of the age of revolutions."—Journal of American History
"Lafayette certainly had political enemies, but Lloyd Kramer shows that few of the great historical personalities of his era were so widely and deeply admired as was the 'hero of two worlds.'. . . This book makes an important contribution to our understanding of the transition between the Enlightenment and Romanticism, of Lafayette's life and intellectual milieu, and of the concrete processes of translation and mediation by which identities are forged."—Journal of Southern History