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The Gilded Youth of Thermidor
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05 March 1993

"Gendron's study of reactionary young men who were active during the Thermidorian reaction helps to round out our picture [of the French Revolution] ... The presentation is cogent and convincing." James A. Leith, Department of History, Queen's University.
"Gendron's well-documented study ends with a distinction between historical objectivity and `human neutrality': proclaiming his `practical and militant' sympathy for the men and women who collapsed from hunger in the streets of Paris in the Year III, he affirms this to be no obstacle to a theoretical understanding of Thermidor." William Scott, Times Literary Supplement.
"This is a useful work and a politically committed one. The narrative is at its best in the account of Prairial, the analysis most valuable in the account of Vendémiaire." Martyn Lyons, Journal of Modern History.
"Here is political history of the best kind which ... provides another angle of vision on to the crucial events of the Year III by tracing the activity of the jeunesse back to anti-Montagnard and anti-recruitment disturbances in November 1792 and May 1793 and following it through to the final defeat in vendémiaire Year III." Historical Journal.
"Gendron's study of reactionary young men who were active during the Thermidorian reaction helps to round out our picture [of the French Revolution] ... The presentation is cogent and convincing." James A. Leith, Department of History, Queen's University. "Gendron's well-documented study ends with a distinction between historical objectivity and `human neutrality': proclaiming his `practical and militant' sympathy for the men and women who collapsed from hunger in the streets of Paris in the Year III, he affirms this to be no obstacle to a theoretical understanding of Thermidor." William Scott, Times Literary Supplement. "This is a useful work and a politically committed one. The narrative is at its best in the account of Prairial, the analysis most valuable in the account of Vendémiaire." Martyn Lyons, Journal of Modern History. "Here is political history of the best kind which ... provides another angle of vision on to the crucial events of the Year III by tracing the activity of the jeunesse back to anti-Montagnard and anti-recruitment disturbances in November 1792 and May 1793 and following it through to the final defeat in vendémiaire Year III." Historical Journal.