Review of 'Sister Revolutions: French Lightning, American Light'
- By Timothy Foote
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2000, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
How could they have done such a thing? Americans, then and now, tend to agree with John Adams, who felt that on their way to the Revolution, French leaders simply checked their common sense at the door. Of course it was more complicated than that, as Susan Dunn, a French-born American who teaches history at Williams College, gracefully demonstrates, comparing and contrasting the men, the manners, and the political convictions that shaped the sister revolutions. Dunn is admirably evenhanded as she dissects the political and intellectual folly of French leaders. Nevertheless, she clearly feels that to know all is not to forgive all. The real problem, Dunn says, was ideas run amok. French intellectuals were much taken with abstract and absolutist theories and utopian notions about government and human nature.
That spirit of the French Revolution, Dunn sadly observes, not only ruined France at the time but has laid its dread mark on every revolution since — the precedent for purging all opponents and stifling dissent. It was no coincidence that in 1918 Lenin ordered up a statue of Robespierre as decoration for the Kremlin.
For modern Americans, this tragic story makes a useful point: proclaiming rights is essentially meaningless unless the government proclaiming them is stable, broadly supported and powerful enough to protect the few from the many, as well as the many from the few. Late in the book, Dunn herself displays a certain, dare one say Gallic? weakness for never-thwart-the-will-of-the-people theorizing. Projecting past upon present, Dunn says that Madison's "horse and buggy" constitution will no longer do for the United States. She feels that its pesky checks and balances keep the majority from making enlightened reforms. There are cases in point, but to date most of the enlightened reforms in recent years, racial integration most notably, have been made by the Supreme Court — precisely because the will of the majority had rejected them.
Everybody should read this book. It offers a lively education in a small package. Then, if there's time, reread Federalist 10 and 51, as well as Simon Schama's book Citizens. What the French took from the Americans, Lord Acton once wrote, "was their theory of revolution not their theory of government — their cutting but not their sewing."
Timothy Foote, based in Washington, D.C., is a contributing editor of Smithsonian.
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