See Especially Works by These Historians
François Furet, Keith Michael Baker, Jack R. Censer, Mona Ozouf, Lynn Hunt most notably;
also Colin Jones, Michel Vovelle, Colin Lucas, Robert Darnton, Sarah Maza, Roger Chartier, Michelle Perrot, and Dale Van Kley.
Furet, François, and Mona Ozouf. A Critical Dictionary of
the French Revolution. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard, 1989.
DC148 .D5313 1989 Reference Fl. 1
A collection of essays covering virtually every aspect of the French Revolution. Organized by key words and themes under five major headings: events ; actors (individuals, groups) ; institutions ; ideas ; historians and commentators.
France - History - Revolution, 1789-1799 Historiography
Samples:
Hérubel, Jean-Pierre. “Recent Articles on French History.” French Historical Studies 40, no. 3 (2017): 539–50. (see below)
Kates, Gary. The French Revolution : Recent Debates and New Controversies. London: Taylor & Francis, 2002. EBook
Mousnier, Roland. The Institutions of France under the Absolute Monarchy 1598-1789. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1984. (2 vols.)
Sample:
Maza, Sarah C. The Myth of the French Bourgeoisie: An Essay on the Social Imaginary, 1750-1850. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2003
Person as author
Example:
LC Subject Headings for primary sources
[search concept] AND su:sources
[search concept] AND su:personal narratives
[person] AND su:correspondence
Antoinette, Marie AND su:correspondence
Example: French Revolution, 1789-1799 AND su:sources
Garnham, B. G. The Intellectual Background of the French Revolution: Original Texts of "Les Idéologues," 1789-1825,
with an Interpretive Commentary. Lewiston N.Y.: E. Mellen Press, 2007.
English translations of sixty-eight texts from a group of intellectuals known as the 'Ideologues' covering
political economy, legislation, religion and morality, education, etc.
Claeys, Gregory. The Political Writings of the 1790s: The French Revolution Debate in Britain.
London: Pickering & Chatto, 1995.
Example: Convention nationale AND su:sources
Seze, Raymond de. The Oration of Desèze, in Defence of Lewis the Sixteenth, King of France ; Pronounced at the
Bar of the National Convention . . Translated from the French Original, Printed and Published by Order of the
Convention. London: C. Dilly, 1793.
Example: French Revolution AND su:personal narratives
Cléry. A Journal of Occurrences at the Temple, During the Confinement of Louis XVI: King of France.
Translated ... by R.C. Dallas. London: Printed by Baylis, 1798.
https://bit.ly/2RMz2zF
Example: Girondists AND su:personal narratives
An Appeal to Impartial Posterity by Madame Rolande . . . written during her
confinement in prisons of the Abbey . . . translated from the French. New York: Robert
Wilson, 1798. From Hathitrust https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000606514
Hunt, Lynn, and Jack Censer. Liberty, Equality, Fraternity:
Exploring the French Revolution. American Social History
Productions, 2001
An extraordinary archive of some of the most important
documentary evidence from the Revolution, including
texts, images, maps, and songs.
Newberry Library French Revolution Pamphlet Collection
https://bit.ly/2jdR9wL
Stanford University French Revolution Digital Archive
Images https://exhibits.stanford.edu/frenchrevolution
Archives parlementaires
https://sul-philologic.stanford.edu/philologic/archparl/
su:France History Revolution 1789-1799
--causes
--women
--societies
--historiography
--bibliography
France
Paris
--18th century
--1789-1799
--1792-1804
--Rural conditions
--Social conditions
--Politics and government
--Economic conditions
--Working class
--Wages
--Slavery Colonies
--Religious aspects
--Catholic Church
--Reign of Terror, 1793-1794
--Agriculture
--First Republic, 1792-1804
--Coup d'etat, 1799
--Consulate and First Empire, 1799-1815
-- Napoleonic Wars, 1800-1815
Samples
Allen, Edward A. “The ‘Patriot’ Curés of 1789 and the
‘Constitutional’ Curés of 1791: A Comparison.” Church
History 54, no. 4 (1985): 473–81.
Andrews, Richard Mowery. "Social Structures, Political
Elites and Ideology in Revolutionary Paris, 1792-94: A
Critical Evaluation of Albert Soboul's "Les Sans-
culottes Parisiens En L'an II"." Journal of Social History
19, no. 1 (1985): 71-112.
Crook, Malcolm. "Citizen Bishops: Episcopal Elections
in the French Revolution." The Historical Journal 43,
no. 4 (2000): 955-76.
Hale, Matthew Rainbow. "On Their Tiptoes: Political Time and Newspapers during the Advent of the Radicalized French Revolution,
circa 1792-1793." Journal of the Early Republic 29, no. 2 (2009): 191-218.
Popkin, Jeremy D. “Thermidor, Slavery, and the ‘Affaire Des Colonies’.” French Historical Studies 38, no. 1
(2015): 61–82.
Rudé, George E. "Prices, Wages and Popular Movements in Paris during the French Revolution."
The Economic History Review, New Series, 6, no. 3 (1954): 246-67.
Sommer, Heather J. “ ‘To Weep over His Faults and His Fate’: America’s Political Factions on the
Trial and Execution of Louis XVI.” History Matters 13 (2016): 117–39.
Steinberg, Ronen. “Terror on Trial: Accountability, Transitional Justice, and the Affaire Le Bon in
Thermidorian France.” French Historical Studies 39, no. 3 (2016): 419–44.
Groups, i.e.
Sans-culottes
Jacobins (Cordeliers, etc.)
Girondists
Amis de la Verité
Les Montagnards
Parti patriote
Things, Events, etc.
Ecclesiastical oath (1791)
National Convention (Convention nationale)
Thermidorian Convention
Maupeou affair
Lettres Patentes du Rois portant Reglement pour le
Commerce de Colonies Francoises
Civil Constitution of the Clergy
X,Y,Z Affair
Quasi-War (1798-1800) Franco-American War 1798-1800
Also use: United States War with France 1798-1800
People
Search H-Net Reviews
Recent books on the French Revolution
Sample:
Dubois, Laurent. A Colony of Citizens: Revolution & Slave
Emancipation in the French Caribbean, 1787-1804.
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 2004.
The American Historical Association’s Guide to Historical
Literature, 3rd ed. New York: Oxford, 1995.
See section 25 entries under these headings:
Cultural and Intellectual History 1715-1789
Politics and Government 1715-1789
Religion 1715-1789
Economy and Society 1715-1789
See also section 26, especially entries under these headings:
Political History French Revolution 1799-1814/15
Education and Scientific Institutions
Religion
Rural, Regional, and Urban History
Women and Gender