H-France Salon, Volumes 1-3 (2009-2011)

Volume 3, Issue 2

H-France Webinar:  “The Age of Revolutions in Global Context”
October 6, 2011

Image result for Lynn Hunt

Guest Presenter:  Lynn Hunt, UCLA

Organizer and Moderator:  Charles Walton, Yale University

Video available HERE

Volume 3, Issue 1

Edited by David Kammerling Smith, Eastern Illinois University

The following paper was presented at the annual meeting of The Society for French Historical Studies, Charleston, SC, February 12, 2011.

Robert Tombs, St John’s College, Cambridge, “How bloody was la Semaine Sanglante? A revision.”

The following papers were written as responses to Robert Tombs’ paper:

Quentin Deluermoz, Université Paris 13/Nord, “Les morts de la Semaine sanglante: retour sur la violence sociale et politique française au XIXe siècle .”

Karine Varley, University of Strathclyde, “Reassessing the Paris Commune of 1871.”

Response to the Salon by Robert Tombs, University of Cambridge.

Volume 2, Issue 1

Edited by Shannon L. Fogg, Missouri University of Science and Technology

The following essays were prepared in response to Meaghan Emery’s article and Richard Golsan’s response to that article published in French Historical Studies 33:4 (Fall 2010).

Shannon L. Fogg, Missouri University of Science and Technology, “The Case of Jean Giono – the Debate Continues

Meaghan Emery, University of Vermont, “Of Historical Hindsight and Oversight, and Why Reopening Giono’s Case Is a Worthy Endeavor

Julian Jackson, Queen Mary University, London, “The Rural Fantasies of Jean Giono

Vera Mark, The Pennsylvania State University, “Negotiating Jean Giono: Texts, History, and Ethics

Volume 1, Issue 1

Edited by David Kammerling Smith, Eastern Illinois University

The following essays are a response to a forum on “Twenty Years after the Bicentennial” appearing in French Historical Studies (Volume 32, Fall 2009).

David A. Bell, The Johns Hopkins University, “À la recherche d’un nouveau paradigme?

Peter R. Campbell, “Redefining the French Revolution. New directions, 1989–2009

Rebecca L. Spang, Indiana University, “Self, Field, Myth: What We Will Have Been

Responses to the Salon from the H-France Community