The Girondins of Chile : Reminiscences of an Eyewitness
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
Book Series
Library of Latin America
ISBN-10
019515181X
ISBN-13
9780195151817
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Sep 4th, 2003
Print length
96 Pages
Weight
146 grams
Dimensions
14.20 x 21.70 x 0.60 cms
Ksh 2,700.00
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The Girondins of Chile deals with events that were inspired by the French Revolution of 1848 and offers a shrewd description of the emerging group of Chilean liberals. Vicuña MacKenna participated in the uprising of 1851, yet his book on the events was not published until 1902.
The Girondins of Chile tells of the strong influence that the European revolutions of 1848 had in Chile, and how they motivated a young Santiago society with high cultural aspirations but little political knowledge or direction. Benjamin Vicuña Mackenna, a Chilean writer and historian who lived during those days in Santiago relates the events of the time, events in which he was a participant. He pays special attention to how the ''1848'' revolutions and their attendant ideas influenced the thoughts and actions of a group of young liberals he called ''Chilean Girondins''.When the news of the fall of Philippe d''Orléans and the subsequent installation of the Second Republic reached Chile, there was an explosion of jubilation in Santiago. Now there were no barriers to ideas, Vicuña Mackenna wrote, "much less to the generous ideas proclaimed by the sincere people of France." But it only took a few days for warnings and critiques of French events to surface, and when a proletarian revolution took place in June in France, Chilean public opinion became virulently anti-revolutionary. Except, of course, among the liberal youth--the ''Chilean Girondins'', who were headed towards revolution, and sooner than anyone thought.When revolution came in 1851, Vicuña Mackenna found even himself sentenced to death for taking part in the uprising. He escaped, spent some years in exile, and was able to return in 1855. He remained active in politics, yet his account of what happened to the ''Chilean Girondins'' in the 1851-2 revolution was not published until 1876.
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