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1688: The First Modern Revolution (The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C)
 
 
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1688: The First Modern Revolution (The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C) [Hardcover]

Steve Pincus (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C September 29, 2009

For two hundred years historians have viewed England’s Glorious Revolution of 1688–1689 as an un-revolutionary revolution—bloodless, consensual, aristocratic, and above all, sensible. In this brilliant new interpretation Steve Pincus refutes this traditional view.

By expanding the interpretive lens to include a broader geographical and chronological frame, Pincus demonstrates that England’s revolution was a European event, that it took place over a number of years, not months, and that it had repercussions in India, North America, the West Indies, and throughout continental Europe. His rich historical narrative, based on masses of new archival research, traces the transformation of English foreign policy, religious culture, and political economy that, he argues, was the intended consequence of the revolutionaries of 1688–1689.

James II developed a modernization program that emphasized centralized control, repression of dissidents, and territorial empire. The revolutionaries, by contrast, took advantage of the new economic possibilities to create a bureaucratic but participatory state. The postrevolutionary English state emphasized its ideological break with the past and envisioned itself as continuing to evolve. All of this, argues Pincus, makes the Glorious Revolution—not the French Revolution—the first truly modern revolution. This wide-ranging book reenvisions the nature of the Glorious Revolution and of revolutions in general, the causes and consequences of commercialization, the nature of liberalism, and ultimately the origins and contours of modernity itself. (20091017)



Editorial Reviews

Review

"[A]n important, fresh, and imaginative work of scholarship. . . . It will have recast the origins of modern England as well as the history of the revolution of 1688."—Bernard Bailyn, New York Review of Books
(Bernard Bailyn New York Review of Books 20090101)

“Mr. Pincus’s cogently argued account of what really happened during England’s revolution destroys many comforting notions that have prevailed for more than 200 years…. It leaves the reader with something much more exciting: a new understanding of the origins of the modern, liberal state.”--Economist

(Economist 20091201)

"Utterly extraordinary."—Don Herzog, University of Michigan
(Don Herzog 20091224)

"In this remarkable work of scholarship, vast in scope and profound in its implications, Pincus challenges Macaulay and the orthodox view that the Glorious Revolution was moderate, peaceful, and conservative, and reveals a violent transformational event that revolutionized England''s state, church, and political economy, and introduced political modernity."—Bernard Bailyn, Harvard University
(Bernard Bailyn 20101108)

"A radical interpretation of a radical revolution.  Steve Pincus''s brilliantly researched account of the extraordinary events of the 1680s and 1690s mounts an insuperable challenge to the comfortable view that the Glorious Revolution was another instance of British consensus politics, pragmatism, and common sense.  1688 recaptures the revolutionary nature of the Glorious Revolution and its far-reaching and interconnected conflicts over foreign policy, political economy, religion, and the nature of the modern state."—John Brewer, California Institute of Technology
(John Brewer )

“A magnificent, fully documented, very well written study of how the first thorough-going modern revolution was achieved with effort and against substantial obstacles over several years.  It was bloody and popular, not merely a palace coup achieved with little loss of life, as is commonly held.  Taking a broader chronological view and considering more aspects of society than previous historians, Pincus convincingly shows how England had become a commercial society by the 1680s, and the race was on to harness new wealth—a race between the absolutist modernizing vision of James II and the more tolerant and liberty-minded vision of his opponents.  What emerged was the first modern state, with independent financial institutions and a strong sense of national and civil, as opposed to confessional, interest.  The triumph of William III and his supporters was a conscious re-ordering of the place of the three kingdoms on the European and world stage.  Pincus''s commitment to vigorous argument (in which he overturns many received views; his definition of revolution itself is bracingly refreshing) makes this book exciting reading, and will raise fascinated interest in the late 17th-century for many years to come.  For anyone interested in modern liberal society, its origins, and why it is worth defending, this book is indispensable.”—Nigel Smith, Princeton University
(Nigel Smith )

Bronze Medal winner for the 2010 Independent Publishers Book Awards in the History Category
(Independent Publishers Book Awards )

"Meticulously researched and deftly written" —Andrew Stuttaford, National Review
(Andrew Stuttaford National Review )

Honorable Mention in the Non-Fiction category of the 2009 New England Book Festival sponsored by the Larimar St. Croix Writers Colony, The Hollywood Creative Directory; eDivvy, Shopanista and Westside Websites
(New England Book Festival )

“One of the most ambitious works of history to appear in recent years--a radical reinterpretation of events that intends not merely to update and improve prior accounts but to vanquish them conclusively. The book is a marvel of scholarship.”--The National
(The National )

"The grand aspirations of this book and the broad sweep of its claims will insure that it is taken seriously by scholars working on the Glorious Revolution for years to come...It will stand out as the opening salvo in a series of historical batkes that wukk light up 1688 in newly vibrant tones."--Paul Monod, Journal of Church History (Paul Monod Journal of Church History )

Winner of the 2010 Morris D. Forkosch Prize given by the American Historical Association
(Morris D. Forkosch Prize American Historical Association )

Named a Top 10 Book of 2010--Wilson Quarterly
(Wilson Quarterly )

"A significant contribution to the scholarship of the period. . . . Pincus develops his analysis through lively writing informed by extensive primary-source research. . . . There is much to be said for Pincus''s approach, blending economic and political theory together with seemingly effortless ease in a well-written and highly readable account...In the end, there is every reason to think that his analysis of the events of late-seventeenth-century England will, for want of a better term, revolutionize our understanding of the period."—Scott Hendrix, Canadian Journal of History
(Scott Hendrix Canadian Journal of History )

About the Author

Steve Pincus is professor of history at Yale University. He is the author of Protestantism and Patriotism and England's Glorious Revolution. He lives in New Haven, CT.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 664 pages
  • Publisher: Yale University Press; 1St Edition edition (September 29, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0300115474
  • ISBN-13: 978-0300115475
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 7.1 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #679,346 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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54 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An important book, but not for the average reader, January 4, 2010
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This review is from: 1688: The First Modern Revolution (The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C) (Hardcover)
Previous readers have all shed light on the strengths and weaknesses of this important book by Steve Pincus. While the author has clearly done very significant research on England's Glorious Revolution of 1688-89, his book will not appeal to casual readers who primarily want to know what happened and why the Glorious Revolution was important.

The problem is that Pincus is overly focused on showing that the Glorious Revolution was actually a modern revolution and on comparing his interpretation with interpretations of other historians. Instead of providing a linear narrative of the events, he summarizes what makes some revolutions modern and then demonstrates that the Glorious Revolution meets all the criteria. Unfortunately, this leads Pincus to jump around a lot within the overall chronology. For historians interested in the period, this probably won't matter; they will find the book rich in analysis and very thought-provoking. I would not be surprised to see Pincus win awards for his book based on the quality of his scholarship. I found his arguments generally persuasive and can see his interpretation eventually becoming the mainstream interpretation. If that occurs, he will have certainly met his main goal in researching and writing the book.

Given the author's focus on justifying his interpretation of the Glorious Revolution, it is not surprising that he fails to paint full portraits of the main actors. While he does give a good sense of what James II was all about, he does not give any insight on why William III was willing to risk invading Great Britain when he was already the ruler of the Netherlands. The same is true of the bit players; Pincus is really only interested in quoting them to support his argument.

Finally, the book suffers from the fact that Pincus beats his argument to death, using 10 quotations when 2 or 3 would have sufficed. This was the main criticism of noted historian Bernard Bailyn in his review of "1688" in "The New York Review of Books" (11/19/2009) which generally praised Pincus for his scholarship and fresh interpretation.

Readers looking for a more accessible narrative of the Glorious Revolution might be better served by The Glorious Revolution: 1688-Britain's Fight for Liberty (2008) by Edward Vallance. I have not yet read it and no Amazon readers have reviewed it yet, but Amazon's Look Inside feature makes it clear that Vallance provides a more conventional narrative history. (The back cover even promises a "thrilling narrative".) Vallance agrees with Pincus that the Revolution was a bloody event. Another possibility is Revolution: The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy, 1685-1720 (2008) by Tim Harris. Bernard Bailyn indicated in his review of the Pincus book that Pincus and Harris were friends in graduate school and made a deal to avoid stepping on each other's books; while Pincus set his history in a broader European context, Harris focused more on the internal dynamics between England, Scotland, and Ireland. (Nobody has reviewed it yet on Amazon.) Readers interested in a history of the broader period, 1603-1714, might want to check out The Century of Revolution: 1603-1714, which was originally written by Christopher Hill in 1961 and updated in 1980; this received 5 star reviews from all 3 Amazon readers who reviewed it.

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43 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Glorious, October 19, 2009
By 
Christian Schlect (Yakima, Washington/USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: 1688: The First Modern Revolution (The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C) (Hardcover)
A superb history of one of the foundation events upon which the modern Western/liberal state was built.

Professor Pincus brings broad and deep scholarship to this book, which, in turn, provides impressive value to the serious reader.

If you want to learn more about why the English turned away from James II and his style of modernization (focused on the French model) and the effects of this revolution on foreign relations, military (blue water navy or a standing army?), economics (land vs. manufacturing as the source of a country's wealth), religion (tolerant?), read this book.

It is not focused on personalities: you will not learn much about William and Mary, for example. However, this book is a remarkable synthesis of various strands of historical thought on what many heretofore have viewed as almost a peaceful, conservative non-event.

Professor Pinucus hammers his firmly held opinions home repeatedly, backed up by multiple citations. His views on the Glorious Revolution seem to this common reader to be sound and quite useful toward explaining not only 1688 England, but also much of the political, economic, and religious world of today.
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Masterful take on a pivotal and complex subject, February 3, 2010
By 
Burke S. Williams (Highland Park, NJ, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: 1688: The First Modern Revolution (The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-C) (Hardcover)
There are easy subjects, hard subjects, very hard subjects, and those precious few subjects that center around the question, "How did we become Modern"? In this last group, the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688 is a particularly tough one to get right, and Pincus succeeds both with the strength of his argument and the clarity (and ease) of his writing. He manages to explain what the old "Whig history" of Macaulay gets right, while also making clear what it gets wrong. The same goes for the more recent revisionist history, where he manages to pick out the very few grains of the revisionist critique that are correct. More than that, he paints a new picture of the events of 1685-1689 that are more vivid, richer, and more plausible than either of these views--this picture partly draws on the largely lost "Radical Whig" narrative, and partly on Pincus' own reading and assembly of the current evidence about the Revolution. In addition to simply being the best, most complete telling of the story of this period that I've read, there are three strengths and one weakness that are worth highlighting, I think:

Strength 1. What stands out in this book is Pincus' new theory of revolutions. Instead of seeing revolutions as a revolt of the new against the old, he argues that the *first* step is that the ruling regime *breaks* with the past to offer a new vision of a modernized state we can call "Model A". That is, the entrenched power structure begins a program of modernization on Model A. A revolution is the result of a new group, who have a different ideal for a modernized state, which we can call Model B, rising up against Model A, not the old traditional ways. In other words, The state does the heavy lifting of destroying traditional, conservative ways, so the revolutionaries only have to compete with an alternate program of modernity. In the case of 1688, James II tried to modernize England as an Absolutist Monarchy along the lines of Louis XIV's France. The revolutionaries rejected this approach, instead electing to "Go Dutch" as Lisa Jardine would have it--they imported a modernization scheme based on the open society of the United Provinces. Not only is this a great explanation of 1688, but this new way of looking at revolutions sparks all sorts of interesting ideas about other revolutions. There is a weakness buried in this strength, however--the book would have benefitted from a more fleshed-out, if still brief, discussion of why the English Civil War is not a "modern revolution" in his eyes.

Strength 2. Pincus does an excellent job of countering the recent narrative (pace Johnathan Israel and others) that the Glorious Revolution was essentially a Dutch invasion and hostile takeover of England (though this is closer to the truth in Scotland, and almost entirely correct in Ireland). Israel and others have done a marvelous job of showing that the old Whig narrative of a small elite inviting Willem van Oranje and Mary Stuart to accept the throne to protect The Protestant Religion and Willem altruistically crossing the channel to bloodlessly march to London and accept the crown on behalf of a grateful nation is horribly inadequate. Pincus adds to this, showing just what a major military operation this was, the fact that it was not bloodless, and that this was an enormous risk for Willem, who very definitely was prepared to fight. He also shows, however, that while he was prepared for great opposition from James, some loyalists, and the French and Irish, he expected to have the overwhelming support of the English people. Pincus is convincing that Willem never would have attempted a hostile takeover, while he was willing to take part in a popular, yet partially opposed, coup d'etat.

Strength 3. Pincus explains, in careful and eye-opening detail, what James II's program was, and what it was not, and what the opposition was concerned about, and what it was not. In particular, he demolishes the notion that this was, at the root, a confessional struggle, based either in unthinking anti-Catholicism on the part of Radical Whigs, or a pox-on-both-your-houses revolt of Anglican hard-liners against a Dissenter-Catholic alliance. James's program was Catholic, to be sure, but it was French Catholic Absolutism, and the "Catholic" was the least important of those three words, and "Absolutism" the most important. He catalogs exactly what Louis XIV's centralized, absolutist police state was, and how James was very successfully copying it in England from 1685-8. The picture painted is not one of Louis merely weakening the old French nobility of Versailles, but of Louis (and James) creating early versions that presage the authoritarian, and ultimately totalitarian states of the later modern centuries. For example, James' quadrupling of the size of the peacetime army and quartering these troops in pubs and private dwellings, while at the same time developing a huge domestic spy network, almost certainly felt to the English as a *massive* increase in military-governmental control of their lives, and a reduction of personal freedoms.

Weakness. While Pincus touches on this, his treatment of the Dutch system the revolutionaries were importing and the background to Willem's Great Gamble in Dutch history is too light to understand the Dutch part of the story. In other words, it's less clear what the revolutionaries thought they were fighting *for* in bringing over Willem and Mary than the Absolutist monarchy they thought they were fighting *against*. It's equally true that Pincus' description the strong support Willem knew he would receive on landing in England explains why he thought the adventure was likely to be successful, while it remains less clear why he was so anxious to try in the first place. If one knows 17th century Dutch history well, Pincus leaves enough breadcrumbs that you can "fill in the blanks", but if you don't, you might be forgiven for thinking that Willem just wanted more provinces to his name like a typical Medieval aristocrat. Without a detailed understanding of Willem II's refusal to disband the army in the 1640s, the near-siege of Amsterdam, and the Stadtholderless period, you can't understand why the willingness of the Staten Generaal to support the Glorious Revolution was so remarkable, and without a much better explanation of the Anglo-French invasion of the United Provinces in 1672 and the fiscal strains of that event, you can't understand why Willem saw this as a defensive maneuver, the only possible way to ensure the survival of the Dutch state and the "True Freedom" that the Dutch saw as their national identity. In telling a broader story in the "European context", Pincus did a fabulous job in explaining the English and French pieces of the puzzle that is the events of 1685-9, as well as the Scottish-Irish pieces, but the Dutch piece is a little light.

All of that said, the book is one of the best history books I've read in some time, and I think will establish the new standard view of this important topic, as well as spinning off other excellent books from Pincus and others that build on this foundation.
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