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The political influence of the French
Revolution is easy to discern. The Revolution itself promoted the ideals
of egalitarianism and the propaganda call of Republicanism. Not only did
the French Revolution uproot French society as a whole, it also gave
rise to the Jacobins' radical and aggressive self-righteousness that
propelled them to spread the revolution across continental Europe.
Therefore Europe was re-organized along the anti-traditional lines set
by the Revolution.
Madman, genius and brilliant actor Antonin Artaud put it in exactly the
right words when he exclaimed way back when, "Who am I? / Where do
I come from? / I am Antonin Artaud / and if I say it / as I know how to
say it / instantly / you will see my present body / explode into pieces
/ and under ten thousand / notorious aspects / a new body / will be
constructed / in which you will never again / be able / to forget
me." Like Artaud’s precious and frail artistic body, the social
organism of France was ripped apart at its seams. Long-standing
traditions, such as Catholicism and decadent hunting parties hosted by
anus-sniffing aristocrats, were suddenly under hostile scrutiny and
ruthlessly abandoned for a seemingly more valuable structure. Church
lands were confiscated and nobles beheaded. But the Jacobins did not
reckon with the wrath of an angry Father Nature that had been deprived
of his useless evolutionary customs (such as hierarchy and
negro-beating). This is why the Jacobins failed to create something
novel, just like the reconstructed Artaud is always reminiscent of his
former incarnation, except that the new version is more
"notorious" and hence unforgettable. The same happened to the
revolutionary regime. It tried to install Utopia in Europe, but ended up
with a dystopian version of France – a country not ruled by the
Absolute Spirit, but rather by the moody members of a blood-thirsty band
of guillotine-presenting ghouls. It was the same old repression – just
with a different cast of characters (the foaming at the mouth
pseudo-proletarian variety).
The revolutionary governments that were set up in different nations of
Europe were replaced by monarchies after Napoleon assumed his imperial
title, even though "in this case the new rulers were drawn from
Napoleon's own family or his trusted subordinates" (Simpson 81).
Hence, most of Europe was still under the control of the French Empire
well after the revolutionary regime had ceased to exist. Of course,
after Napoleon was defeated, all the revolutionary/Napoleonic
governments were abolished in Europe, but parts of their legacy endured
and helped to propel the continent onto its path of modernization, both
in the political as well as the economical sense. This makes the French
Revolution the mother of all revolutions - in the sense that it was
total and absolute, changing the face of Western civilization forever.
In other words, the French Revolution was a shanghaiing of necessary
reform movements - executed in order to force new values upon a decaying
system of traditions. It was surely a time when the lower classes were
"hailed" en masse (literally).
How did the famous Dada prophet and madman Johannes Baader put it?
"A new act of the Divine Comedy has started and its slogan is this:
Human beings know that they are in heaven." This is what the
self-proclaimed spokesmen (high and mighty rhetoric-sputtering comics of
a not-new age) of the farmers and laborers thought. They did not realize
or purposely ignored the fact (more likely) that the French masses were
– as always – in desperate need of religious/spiritual instruction.
Sometimes, the sickle and the plow just are not enough to satisfy the
primal needs of European man!
After France's glorious years of continental conquest and its ultimate
defeat (disregarding the second coming of Napoleon) at the battle of
Leipzig in 1813, the political landscape of Europe was altered forever.
As Simpson puts it, "Nationalism, meaning a strong sense of
identity between a state and its people, received a marked boost"
(84). This means that the various peoples of Europe all of a sudden felt
a strong connection to their respective fatherlands, a sort of group
identity that had not existed before. This rather provincial change in
attitude toward one's nation came about because the various European
nations were occupied by French troops for quite a while, and because of
the suppression of their freedom to exercise the sovereign will of their
own nations, they longed for the "good old days" when there
was no occupation. The passionate fever of nationalism started during
this time when the different peoples wanted to free themselves from the
Napoleonic yoke.
"Equality" was another term that increasingly gained more
influence, even after the fall of the revolutionary regime. For example,
Napoleon had granted civil rights to Jews. After Napoleon was defeated,
the Congress of Vienna "confirmed these rights and made a vague
recommendation that they should be extended" (Simpson 91). This
would have been an unthinkable decision before the impact of the French
Revolution. Another important issue, concerning the quite modern notion
of "human rights," was the abolition of the slave trade.
Napoleon had abolished it in 1815 after his brief return to power (not
after he restored it in 1802, though) and at the Congress of Vienna,
France, Sweden and Holland followed suit. Only "Spain continued the
trade until 1820" (Simpson 91).
In terms of guaranteeing a lasting peace in Europe, "the Allies
also undertook to meet at regular intervals for the purpose of
discussing what measures would be 'most salutary for the repose and
prosperity of nations and for the maintenance of the peace in
Europe'" (Simpson 87). This notion is vaguely reminiscent of
contemporary organizations, such as the UN or NATO, in the sense that
the European powers actually started to care about stability and
"maintenance of the peace." Obviously, the shockwave that the
Revolution produced and the subsequent rise of Napoleon's aggressive and
bloody campaigns were still fresh memories in the hearts of the European
rulers. This may explain why they decided to organize themselves in a
cooperative effort to curb any further aggression.
Of course, territorial changes in the political landscape were also
major results of the Revolution and Napoleon. For example, under
Napoleon, the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation was dissolved, and
in its place forty departments (after the French model) were created. At
the Congress of Vienna, the German Confederation was established. The
Confederation was a loose association of German states. It had exactly
the same boundaries as the Holy Roman Empire after the Peace of
Westphalia, but as opposed to the Empire, the Confederate's member
states were fully sovereign.
It can be argued that no event contributed as much to the way modern
Europe looks as the French Revolution. Many of our contemporary ideals,
such as human rights, equality before the law and parliamentary
democracy, have their direct roots in the Jacobin seizure of power in
1789. If the development that was triggered by this pivotal event is
necessarily a good or a bad one is a matter of debate that never ceases
to heat the minds and intellects of opposing factions.
Bibliography
Artaud, Antonin. "Post-Scriptum."
Baader, Johannes. "Die acht Weltsaetze."
Simpson, William and Martin Jones. Europe 1783 - 1914. Routledge:
New York, 2000.
- Constantin von Hoffmeister
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