Christy Pichichero
Unfreedom: Theme and Variations in Eighteenth-Century France In metropolitan France, enslaved people and free people of color alike navigated a treacherous and shifting legal lands
Chloe Summers Edmondson
Letters and Social Activism: Voltaire, the Calas Affair, and Mobilizing Public Opinion This paper examines how the media environment of Enlightenment France was conducive for epist
Masano Yamashita
“Cette main ouverte de la danseuse”: Marie-Madeleine Guimard’s economic agency, or largesse as resistance This paper examines the economic agency of the eighteenth-cen
Yann Robert
Louis Mandrin and the Birth of a New Mode of Resistance: Egalitarian Vigilantism After his execution in 1755, Louis Mandrin became a legend, a popular underdog who had resisted and
Jean-Loup Kastler Vassilievitch
De résistance en révolution : les “faubourgs verts” de Grenoble aux origines de la Journée des Tuiles du 7 juin 1788 ? La « centralité paradoxale » des Alpes française
Mathieu Ferradou
Des Whiteboys aux Defenders, de l’économie morale à la révolution des communs ? Résistances populaires à la colonisation en Irlande, 1760-1820 Dans le sillage de l’history
Aliocha Maldavsky
Resisting the sheep?: Andean populations confronted with the introduction of European wool animals in the 16th century The conquest of the Americas in the 16th century was accompan
Ollie Cussen
Colonial Abundance and the Resistance of Nature In the early eighteenth century, unprecedented affluence was bringing societies across Europe and East Asia up against ecological li
Robin Bates
Slaveholder Indemnities as Economic Development: France, 1848-1852 France abolished slavery in 1848. Enslavers were indemnified – as they had been in 1825, when France extracted
Stephen J. Miller
Quesnay, Turgot, Diderot, and the Transition to Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France Historians associate Quesnay, Turgot and the physiocrats with the deregulation of the grain