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The contingency, confusion, and many contradictions inherent in revolutionary moments are often hard to capture in written histories. As historians, after all, we know the outcomes; we can identify many constraints contributing to and consequences of decisions actors at the time were making with imperfect information.
The benefit of a fuller perspective granted by time, distance, and access to many vantage points is one of the most crucial components of historical investigation. Yet, it can be hard to convey the truly tumultuous, chaotic, and downright intense nature of events in the past, especially as revolutions raged. As we grasp with living through times we can often sense are historically significant and yet hard to comprehend, thinking about the history of revolutions feels especially relevant and urgent.
Two recently published books on the French Revolutionary period experiment with different methodological and narrative approaches in ways that help highlight the uncertain and highly contingent course of events. We connected with these authors to ask them more about how their approaches led them to think about the Revolution in new ways.
Check out our interview with Colin Jones here. The following is an interview I conducted with Tackett. Timothy Tackett TT : I encountered the letters of Adrien Colson in a publication basically treating the French Revolution, and there were about a hundred letters published. At that point I was searching around for other letters relating to this period, so I wrote to the archivist at the archives of the department of Indre, which is in the center of France, and I asked were there any others?
And he said: oh, yes, there are hundreds. But in almost every letter there were two or three paragraphs at the end in which he talked about things going on in Paris, sometimes things about his life, sometimes sharing information concerning his friends. As you probably know, I subsequently made ample use of the letters in my book on the coming of the Terror.