Revolutionary Spring
Fighting for a New World 1848-1849
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Narrated by:
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Christopher Clark
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
'People embraced each other, shook hands, joy radiated from every eye, there was no limit to the celebrations...'
There can be few more exciting or frightening moments in European history than the spring of 1848. Almost as if by magic, in city after city, from Palermo to Paris to Venice, huge crowds gathered, sometimes peaceful and sometimes violent, and the political order that had held sway since the defeat of Napoleon simply collapsed.
Christopher Clark's spectacular new book recreates with verve, wit and insight this extraordinary period. Some rulers gave up at once, others fought bitterly, but everywhere new politicians, beliefs and expectations surged forward. The role of women in society, the end of slavery, the right to work, national independence and the final emancipation of the Jews all became live issues.
In a brilliant series of set-pieces, Clark conjures up both this ferment of new ideas and then the increasingly ruthless and effective series of counter-attacks launched by regimes who still turned out to have many cards to play. But even in defeat, exiles spread the ideas of 1848 around the world and - for better and sometimes much worse - a new and very different Europe emerged from the wreckage.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2023 Christopher Clark (P)2023 Penguin AudioCritic reviews
Having now got through this chunky, often fascinating, impressively researched and constructed book,TBH I'm still not sure I know much about them. It's just too big, too fragmented, too nonlinear to really follow what was going on and why. As Clark puts it in the conclusion, "The revolutions of 1848... were marked throughout by polyvocality, lack of coordination and the layering of many cross-cutting vectors of intention and conflict."
But despite it being incredibly hard to keep track of all the personalities, motivations, and politics, there's much here to like - especially when Clark zooms out for some more thematic chapters. The one focusing on the role of and impact on women was particularly interesting.
So do I now have a better idea of what happened? Not really - not Clark's fault, the details just refused to sink in.
But do I have a better understanding of why 1848 was such a significant moment in European history? Definitely. And a bonus side-effect is that this has also made me far more interested in 19th century history, a period I'd long dismissed as a bit dull. I'll no doubt be digging into this further.
Fascinating but hard to follow
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The author's reading dodges the common issue with long form academic audiobooks: strange intonations and cadences because the narrator knows less about the events, concepts, and languages present in the text than the author. Clark's voice was made to lecture and narrate, and the text is pitched perfectly for the intelligent general reader of history; neither superficial nor pedantic.
Five stars across the board. From the non-specialist perspective, it is basically perfect. Buy it now.
Essentially flawless
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So very good
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A big thank you to the reader who displayed exceptional care to learn the pronunciations of foreign names and expressions properly. It is a quality rarely heard in audiobooks.
So much happened!
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Brilliant performance of a brilliant book
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