Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Gouverneur Morris and the salons of revolutionary France

View through CrossRef
Introduction. The French Revolution contributed to the rapid politicization of society, which could not but affect the traditional salon culture by that time, creating a unique atmosphere of merging private and public. The salon, first of all, is a conversation, a free exchange of opinions on different topics, including political ones. The contribution of salon hostesses, influential and often wellknown ladies, to the revolutionary cause, as well as the range of ideas and political sentiments that salons broadcast during this period, especially in metropolitan circles, remains debatable. Materials and Methods. The key source of Mr. Morris’s “salon communications” are his diary entries, which he kept during his entire stay in Paris focusing mainly on his notes on political events and direct participation in revolutionary events (as a diplomat). Analysis. The article examines the social activity of Gouverneur Morris (1792-1794), who arrived in France at the beginning of the Revolution as a private citizen, and then became the official plenipotentiary representative of the United States. One of the main sources of information for Morris, which he recorded in his diary and then forwarded to Washington, became the Paris salons, where he managed to find not only valuable acquaintances in the pleasant society of fashionable ladies, but also to receive valuable information about affairs in the capital and beyond. Results. Morris regularly visited the most famous salons in Paris; this was the main form of his political activity at the beginning of the Revolution. The “World of Salons” did not die in 1788, its rapid politicization begins. Morris could be found among both royalists and liberals. His critical notes demonstrate an outside view of the political discussions in salons during the Revolution and, at the same time, testify to the importance of salons in the political life of France in 1789-1793.
Title: Gouverneur Morris and the salons of revolutionary France
Description:
Introduction.
The French Revolution contributed to the rapid politicization of society, which could not but affect the traditional salon culture by that time, creating a unique atmosphere of merging private and public.
The salon, first of all, is a conversation, a free exchange of opinions on different topics, including political ones.
The contribution of salon hostesses, influential and often wellknown ladies, to the revolutionary cause, as well as the range of ideas and political sentiments that salons broadcast during this period, especially in metropolitan circles, remains debatable.
Materials and Methods.
The key source of Mr.
Morris’s “salon communications” are his diary entries, which he kept during his entire stay in Paris focusing mainly on his notes on political events and direct participation in revolutionary events (as a diplomat).
Analysis.
The article examines the social activity of Gouverneur Morris (1792-1794), who arrived in France at the beginning of the Revolution as a private citizen, and then became the official plenipotentiary representative of the United States.
One of the main sources of information for Morris, which he recorded in his diary and then forwarded to Washington, became the Paris salons, where he managed to find not only valuable acquaintances in the pleasant society of fashionable ladies, but also to receive valuable information about affairs in the capital and beyond.
Results.
Morris regularly visited the most famous salons in Paris; this was the main form of his political activity at the beginning of the Revolution.
The “World of Salons” did not die in 1788, its rapid politicization begins.
Morris could be found among both royalists and liberals.
His critical notes demonstrate an outside view of the political discussions in salons during the Revolution and, at the same time, testify to the importance of salons in the political life of France in 1789-1793.

Related Results

Gouverneur Morris
Gouverneur Morris
Remembered primarily as the author of the American Constitution’s preamble, Gouverneur Morris (b. 1752–d. 1816) was also the author of a few essays, a thousand-page long private di...
The Case of the Dishonest Scrivener: Gouverneur Morris and the Creation of the Federalist Constitution
The Case of the Dishonest Scrivener: Gouverneur Morris and the Creation of the Federalist Constitution
At the end of the Constitutional Convention, the delegates appointed the Committee of Style and Arrangement to bring together the textual provisions that the Convention had previou...
Memoir of a Republican Royalist: Gouverneur Morris, Chronicler and Actor of the French Revolution
Memoir of a Republican Royalist: Gouverneur Morris, Chronicler and Actor of the French Revolution
The Paris sojourn of the author of A Diary of the French Revolution is possibly the most fascinating period of his eventful life. As George Washington's informant and emissary (off...
Writer vs Painter: Denis Diderot’s “Salons”
Writer vs Painter: Denis Diderot’s “Salons”
Diderot devoted more than twenty years (1759–1781) to his work as an art critic, he wrote not only nine reviews of exhibitions, but also a number of important aesthetic treatises. ...
Gouverneur Morris, France, and Republicanism in the Atlantic Space
Gouverneur Morris, France, and Republicanism in the Atlantic Space
Abstract: Exemplifying par excellence the American and exotic figure Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson had epitomized before him, Gouverneur Morris worked in France as the her...
Influencing Factors of Facial Spa Treatment on Visit Intention: An Importance-Performance Matrix Analysis (IPMA) Approach
Influencing Factors of Facial Spa Treatment on Visit Intention: An Importance-Performance Matrix Analysis (IPMA) Approach
Nowadays, grooming is considered an essential part of life to maintaining and up keeping a healthy and hygienic outlook which plays a key role in social bonding. As it turns out, t...
Reconstruire une vision américaine de la Révolution française : Gouverneur Morris, architecte d’une pensée anti-Jeffersonienne ?
Reconstruire une vision américaine de la Révolution française : Gouverneur Morris, architecte d’une pensée anti-Jeffersonienne ?
L’historiographie de la Révolution française est dense, et ses récits fondateurs témoignent du caractère polyphonique de cette structure narrative. Parmi ses voix américaines, les ...
America's Machiavellian: Gouverneur Morris at the Constitutional Convention
America's Machiavellian: Gouverneur Morris at the Constitutional Convention
AbstractWhile generally a steady ally of James Madison and the nationalists, Gouverneur Morris, delegate from Pennsylvania, worked from a different conception of republican politic...

Back to Top