Peter Constantine's honors include the PEN Translation Prize, the
National Translation Award, the Helen and Kurt Wolff Translation
Prize, and Greece's Translators of Literature Prize. He translated
Machiavelli's The Prince for Vintage Classics.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born in Geneva in 1712. He was a writer
and political theorist of the Enlightenment. In 1750 he published
his first important work 'A Discourse on the Sciences and the Arts'
(1750) where he argued that man had become corrupted by society and
civilisation. In 1755, he published 'Discourse on the Origin of
Inequality' and in 'The Social Contract' (1762) he argued, "Man is
born free, and everywhere he is in chains". This political treatise
earned him exile from his home city of Geneva and arguably inspired
the French Revolution (his ashes were transferred to the Pantheon
in Paris in 1794). He also wrote ' mile', a treatise on education
and 'The New Eloise' (1761). This novel scandalised the French
authorities who ordered Rousseau's arrest. In his last 10 years,
Rousseau wrote his 'Confessions'. In The Confessions he remembers
his adventurous life, his achievements and the persecution he
suffered from opponents. His revelations inspired the likes of
Proust, Goethe and Tolstoy among others. Rousseau died on 2 July in
France in 1778.
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