Introduction
1: Head of the Household: Disgrace at the Courts of Louis XIII and
Louis XIV
2: Master and Servant: Ministerial Disgrace in the Reign of Louis
XIV
3: 'Sire, in the name of God, have pity on me': The Personal
Experience of Disgrace
4: The Golden Age of Ministerial Exile, 1715-1774
5: Disgrace and Judicial Politics: How, and How Not, to Punish the
Parlements
6: Of Secrets and Supper Parties: Disgrace at the Court of Louis
XV
7: 'The secret of knowing how to be bored': Daily Life in
Disgrace
8: Emptying the Chamber Pot: Family and Friendship in Disgrace
9: 'The cry of the people is the voice of God': The Popular
Politics of Disgrace
10: Disgrace without Dishonour
11: From Disgrace to Despotism: Lettres de cachet, Arbitrary
Punishment, and the Campaign for a Law of Public Safety
12: Idol of the Nation: Ministerial Disgrace in the Reign of Louis
XVI
Conclusion
Bibliography
Julian Swann has taught at Birkbeck College, University of London, since 1989. He is the author of Politics and the Parlement of Paris under Louis XV, 1754-1774 and Provincial power and absolute monarchy: the Estates General of Burgundy, 1661-1790 as well as many articles on the political and administrative history of early modern France. His next project is to complete a biography of Louis XV.
Julian Swann's reflective and fine study of the political culture
of ancien regime France gives us different questions to aks, and
more to go on.
*Mark Greengrass, Times Literary Supplement*
Exile, Imprisonment or Death has many strengths. It deftly combines
political, cultural and intellectual history. It contains numerous
case studies that illuminate its perceptive theoretical
underpinnings. It reveals much about the workings of Bourbon France
in relation to power structures and the complicated yet personal
ways in which the political classes negotiated with each other. It
is a welcome reminder of the importance of religion, honour and
duty to the educated people of Enlightenment France.
*Stephen Brogan, Journal of the Liberal International British Group
*
This significant scholarly contribution to early modern French
history and the political foundations of the French Revolution is
most likely to appeal to academic audiences....Highly
recommended.
*CHOICE*
While only presented as a series of contexts for the study of exile
and disgrace, Swann has, in fact, written the best brief and the
most authoritative history of the high politics in the last decades
of the ancien régime. The major sources on the councils, the court,
and the Parlements, both archival and secondary, are woven into the
grand narrative constructed by the fiffteen major historians of the
period, beginning with Dom Leclercq, whose work on the Regency
dates from 1921. Swann takes their best ?ndings and pulls them
together, while making judgments that help the critical reader.
*Journal of Modern History*
Masterfully traced and analysed Swann's ... study of disgrace is a
pleasure to read; it is written with style, clarity, and a touch of
humour throughout
*H-France*
Julian Swanns latest monograph is a timely contribution... he has
managed to identify and explore lucidly so many facets of early
modern disgrace, seemingly exhaustively, is in itself laudable.
*Adam Horsley, The Seventeenth Century*
[a] well researched, masterful study. Clearly anyone who hopes to
understand the dynamics of French court politics and its culture
cannot afford to overlook it ... disgrace was central to the
politics of the French court during the early modern period. Now it
has received its historian.
*Thomas E. Kaiser, The Court Historian*
[a] stunning new book ... This book is important, not just because
it amounts to the first detailed study of a neglected and important
aspect of royal power, but also because it presents an innovative
way of looking at politics over the long durée that exposes an
entire culture to examination. Previously known as one of the
leading revisionist historians of eighteenth-century French
politics, Swann now breaks free of the shackles of revisionism to
present an utterly fresh and illuminating study of the Ancien
Regime political society, which demonstrates why absolute monarchy
was unable to achieve serious reform and why so few lamented its
passing.
*Stuart Carroll, Journal of Early Modern History*
[Swann] has produced an extremely readable volume ... Ancien régime
politics were bewilderingly complex, and it is much to this book's
credit to make them not just comprehensible but enjoyably dramatic.
It will be vital reading for students of ancien régime history at
both an undergraduate and a more advanced level.
*Ambrogio A. Caiani, History*
This remarkably rich and insightful book will remain an essential
read on Bourbon political culture and opens up exciting comparative
perspectives wider afield, on the early modern period and
beyond.
*Giora Sternberg, European History Quarterly*
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