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Citizen Tocqueville
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15797 |
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BOOK WORLD
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1 / 1989 |
5,021 Words |
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Wilfred M. McClay Wilfred M. McClay is an assistant professor of history at
Tulane University in New Orleans. |
TOCQUEVILLE
A Biography
Andre Jardin, translated by Lydia Davis with Robert Hemenway
New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1988
548 pp., $19.95
None of the great thinkers of the modern era is so imperfectly known and understood as Alexis de Tocqueville. This is not to say that his work is obscure; on the contrary--his magnum opus, the two volumes of Democracy in America (1835-40), is still widely regarded as one of the profoundest investigations of democracy and most insightful and enduring portraits of the United States ever written. The Old Regime and the French Revolution, moreover, left tragically unfinished at Tocqueville's death, remains a touchstone for the exploration of France's modern history. Yet the man behind the work has not excited anything like the same interest as the work itself; certainly not when one thinks of the near-obsessive interest shown in the character and deeds of Nietzsche, Freud, or Marx, who are his rightful peers. A small but telling indication of this lack of interest is the fact that Americans so often misrender his name as "de" Tocqueville, an inconsistency that is even reflected in R.R. Bowker's Books in Print. For some mysterious reason, Tocqueville's work has existed, at least in the rather self-interested imaginations of his American readers, as a freestanding entity, a rich if unsystematic oeuvre filled with haunting presentiments and astounding prophecies.
But, as Andre Jardin demonstrates in this magisterial biography of the elusive Frenchman, to concentrate on Tocqueville's writings without
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