Description
Book SynopsisThis is an innovative study of how race and empire transformed French republican citizenship during the early Third Republic. Integrating the histories of metropolitan and colonial France, Elizabeth Heath reveals how global market integration and economic crisis redefined French republican citizenship, creating the foundations of the modern French racial state.
Trade Review'The story Heath tells about an earlier moment of globalization is an important lesson for our times, when arguments about agricultural standards are simultaneously about quality and about supply, competitiveness and price, not to mention our way of life … Read this book. Its story may be about France, but is lesson is universal.' Mary Dewhurst Lewis, Reviews and Critical Commentary (councilforeuropeanstudies.org/critcom)
Table of ContentsIntroduction: of wine and sugar; Part I: 1. Wine, sugar, and the new global economy; 2. Defining Republican citizenship on the peripheries; Part II: 3. Propertied elites and a new liberal citizenship; 4. Socialism and the rise of worker politics; 5. Small holders and the promise of rural democracy; Part III: 6. Union member and citizen; 7. Defining French citizenship in a global age; Conclusion: globalization, empire, and the making of modern France; Bibliography; Index.