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Rights, Representation, and Reform - Nonsense upon Stilts and Other Writings
on the French Revolution eds. Philip Schofield, Catherine Pease-Watkin and
Cyprian Blamires (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2002) pp. lxviii, 486.
This volume consists of writings inspired, like Political Tactics, by
events in France. Two long essays and two shorter ones, in French, were written
in the early days of the Revolution. `France', written before the opening of
the Estates-General, deals, among other things, with the relation between the
King and the Estates-General, the freedom of the press, and certain rules of
procedure to be observed at the opening of a session of the Estates.
In November 1788 Jacques Necker presented a series of
questions, concerning the forthcoming elections to the Estates-General, to the Assembly of the Notables. For the most part
Necker's questions dealt with the qualifications to be required
of both elector and elected in each of the three orders.
Bentham's essay 'Considérations d'un Anglois sur la composition des États-Généraux' consists of his own detailed
answers to almost all of these questions.
Of the two shorter French essays, one is Bentham's
response, entitled `Observations d'un Anglois sur un écrit
intitulé Arrêté de la Noblesse de Bretagne', to a
statement issued by the Breton nobility in November 1788 in
support of the 1614 constitution of the Estates-General. The
other is a brief commentary on a document published in July 1789
by Clermont-Tonnerre, containing a list of constitutional
principles which had been extracted from the cahiers de
doléance submitted to the Estates-General.
The volume contains a number of previously unpublished essays in English. Amongst
these are 'On the necessity of an omnipotent legislature', which criticises
the provision inserted in the French Constitution of 1791 prohibiting any changes
in the constitution for ten years, and Bentham's own proposals for a new constitution
entitled 'Projet for a French Constitutional Code'.
The volume is completed by one of Bentham's earliest anti-colonial essays,
Emancipate Your Colonies!, and the famous attack on the French Declaration
of Rights, hitherto known as 'Anarchical Fallacies', but to be published here
under Bentham's own title 'Nonsense upon Stilts'.
Catherine Pease-Watkin and Philip Schofield
For more details of the contents of this volume and sample pages from the publisher's
web site click here
This page last modified
2 April, 2009
by Irena
Nicoll
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