Esteemed professor Donald M.G. Sutherland provides a riveting account of the French Revolution, explaining how its effects varied greatly according to regional economies, social structures, and religious affiliations. He examines how massive counterrevolutionary movements profoundly affected the course of the Revolution, leading to the failure of constitutional government and, ultimately, to an elitist dictatorship in the person of Napoleon Bonaparte that paved the way for many of the struggles of the nineteenth century.
Place, Practice, Politics
Esther Anatolitis
bookThe Last Rhinos
Lawrence Anthony, Graham Spence
audiobookSupreme Power
Jeff Shesol
audiobookThe Promise of American Life
Herbert David Croly
bookFrederick Douglass - A Biography
Charles W. Chesnutt
audiobookbookThe Simple Faith of Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Christine Wicker
audiobookThe Inevitability of Tragedy : Henry Kissinger and His World
Barry Gewen
audiobookMeet the Candidates 2020: Bernie Sanders: A Voter's Guide
bookThe Unmaking of the President 2016: How FBI Director James Comey Cost Hillary Clinton the Presidency
Lanny J. Davis
bookA History of Greek Philosophy
W. T. Stace
bookPhilosophy and the Social Problem
Will Durant
bookCompassionate Conservatism : What It Is, What It Does, and How It Can Transform America
Marvin Olasky
book