In Defence of the Terror
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Provocative reassessment of the Great Terror as a price worth paying

About the Author

Sophie Wahnich is a historian based at the Laboratoire d'anthropologie des institutions et des organisations sociales in Paris. Her previous publications include L'impossible citoyen. L'étranger dans le discours de la Révolution française and La Longue patience du peuple: 1792, naissance de la République.

Reviews

We were not waiting merely for a book like this; this is the book we were waiting for.
*Slavoj Zizek, from the foreword*

Many of the participants in the French revolution thought long and hard about such questions, and while it is sometimes difficult to understand their thoughts, and not always comfortable to do so, it is always interesting to go back into that perennial political laboratory and try. Wahnich's provocative book is testament to that.
*Guardian*

Our default position has become one of lazy dismissal: with all of the blood and brutality, how could we, why would we, want to consider the Terror as anything but a horror show? . Wahnich's subversive reflection is that far from taking lives, the Terror was actually about saving them.
*Jacobin*

Sophie Wahnich illuminates the origins of the French revolutionary terror in an effort to help us to think clearly about the relationships between revolution, violence and terror in general.
*Times Education Supplement*

In Defence of the Terror is a provocative and compelling essay, well written and impressively concise, with a good mix of contemporary resonance and archival detail.
*Peter Hallward*

A bold and stimulating essay, seeking to understand the Terror instead of ritual reprobation of its 'excesses.'
*Cahiers d’Histoire*

In this portable (5.5x8") study, Wahnich (the Laboratory of the Anthropology of Institutions and Social Organizations, France) goes against current historical interpretations of the Jacobin Terror of the French Revolution when she says that the Terror was a precisely planned and controlled attempt to prevent further violence by the public. She also compares the French revolutionary Terror with recent fundamentalist terrorism.
*Book News*

An intriguing take on modern social issues and history.
*The Midwest Book Review*

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