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Thomas Paine's Rights of Man (Books That Changed the World)
 
 
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Thomas Paine's Rights of Man (Books That Changed the World) [Audiobook, CD, Unabridged] [Audio CD]

Christopher Hitchens (Author), Simon Vance (Narrator)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 15, 2007 Books That Changed the World
Thomas Paine is one of the greatest political propagandists in history. The Rights of Man, first published in 1791, is the key to his reputation. Inspired by his outrage at Edmund Burke's attack on the uprising of the French people, Paine's text is a passionate defense of the rights of man. Paine argued against monarchy and outlined the elements of a successful republic, including public education, pensions, and relief of the poor and unemployed, all financed by income tax. Since its publication, The Rights of Man has been celebrated, criticized, maligned, and suppressed. But here, commentator Christopher Hitchens, Paine's natural heir, marvels at its forethought and revels in its contentiousness. Above all, he shows how Thomas Paine's Rights of Man forms the philosophical cornerstone of the world's most powerful republic: the United States of America.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Christopher Hitchens is a contributing editor to Vanity Fair and a visiting professor in liberal studies at the New School in New York. His books include Why Orwell Matters, Thomas Jefferson: Author of America, and God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. Simon Vance, a former BBC Radio presenter and newsreader, is a full-time actor who has appeared on both stage and television. He has recorded over four hundred audiobooks and has earned over twenty Earphones Awards from AudioFile magazine, including one for his narration of Theft by Peter Carey. A twelve-time Audie finalist, Simon has won three Audie Awards, including one for Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, and the 2008 Booklist Voice of Choice Award. He has also been named an AudioFile Golden Voice as well as an AudioFile Best Voice of 2009.

From AudioFile

Described as an attempt to marry the ideas of the American and the French Revolutions . . . and to disseminate these ideas in Britain, THE RIGHTS OF MAN is one of the most influential books of political philosophy of the late eighteenth century. Christopher Hitchens, long an admirer of Paines ideas and writings, looks at the context and content of this great work and its influence around the world. Simon Vance narrates with his usual dulcet tone, and his phlegmatic approach tends to smooth out Hitchenss inherent edginess. Those familiar with the way Hitchens speaks may find this book too tame for their taste, in spite of Vances fine narration. K.M. © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Tantor Media; Unabridged edition (September 15, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400103916
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400103911
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 5.5 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #248,310 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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71 of 76 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Flaming Edmund Burke, September 1, 2007
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This pint size book provides some interesting commentary on the writings of Thomas Paine. Although it is also a mini biography, it is foremost a tale of the verbal battle between Paine and Edmund Burke who wrote a criticism of the French revolution entitled "Reflections on the Revolution in France."

Paine always spoke his mind. His fiery remarks helped spark the American revolution, and later, in France, he so freely vented his opinions on what the French should be doing that he was thrown into prison, and narrowly escaped execution. Paine was vastly irritated by Burke (who deplored the French revolution), and was prompted to do a 19th century version of flaming.

Thomas Paine wasn't the only one irked by Englishman Burke. Jefferson wrote about him to a friend of his discussing the "rottenness of his (Burke's) mind." How else should a new American feel about Burke's glorification of the aristocracy and scruffy put-down of the rights of citizens. It is both informative, and entertaining to read about this famous debate between Burke and Paine.

I feel obliged to add John Barrell wrote a very negative review of this book in the London Review of Books. He accuses Hitchens of historical inaccuracy and even plagiarism. Nevertheless I enjoyed the book. It is quite accessible to the average reader, and I highly recommend it.

Finally I can't help but remark on what seems to be an ego trip on Hitchen's part. On the front and back cover of the book is a picture of a man. Thomas Paine's picture? No, Christopher Hitchen's picture. Again, on the front cover, we find Mr. Hitchen's name in significantly larger type than the name of Thomas Paine. I guess when you have a book on the best seller list (God Is Not Great) you get a little puffed up.
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49 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Tribute to a Champion of Liberty, September 12, 2007
Christopher Hitchens, whose previous publications include Why Orwell Matters; Thomas Jefferson: Author of America; and the international best seller God Is Not Great, has been called "a Tom Paine for our troubled times" (The Independent, London).

In Thomas Paine's Rights of Man, Hitchens has penned an enlightening account of the life and work of Thomas Paine (1737-1809).

"Thomas Paine's Rights of Man," he writes, "is both a trumpet of inspiration and a carefully wrought blueprint for a more rational and decent ordering of society, both domestically and on the international scene."

Paine, "the firebrand of the Revolution," helped foment the American Revolution through his powerful and, for the times, incendiary, writings, most notably his first great work, Common Sense (published in 1776; its working title had been Plain Truth).

Hitchens calls this earlier work "the largest achievement in the history of pamphleteering. . . . Of Common Sense it can be said, without any risk of cliche, that it was a catalyst that altered the course of history."

Later works by Paine include The Crisis (sometimes referred to as The American Crisis), The Age of Reason, and Rights of Man. It is Hitchens' commentary on the last-mentioned work which constitutes the lion's share of the present volume.

Hitchens asserts that Paine's Rights of Man was "not just a paean to human liberty. It was partly a short-term polemic, directed in particular at Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France."

Edmund Burke, who had earlier supported the American Revolution, "seemed to be mutating from Whiggery through Toryism and into a full-blown reactionary." Believing the biblical claim that "the powers that be are ordained of God," he endorsed the "divine right of kings."

Paine, agreeing with views such as those championed by John Locke in The Social Contract, denied "the divine right of kings" and asserted that human rights are founded not on a contract between a king (or any other autocratic ruler) and the people, but on a contract between various peoples, and that governments are instituted by human beings for the mutual good of all its citizens.

Hitchens also discusses other thinkers such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Hobbes, and Karl Marx, vis-a-vis the origin, nature, scope, and limitations of political power.

Hitchens, a notorious freethinker, writes, "It is absolutely certain that no deity had anything to do with the process [the formation of government], just as it is certain that merely human authorities have always sought to cloak themselves in supernatural or superhuman claims." Although the latter part of this sentence is correct, one must be skeptical of all such claims to "absolute certainty."

Such hubris was the undoing of the French Revolution, in which Paine had such hopes for the extension of democracy throughout the world, and in which he was so disappointed because of the reign of terror led by Maximilien Robespierre. He was further disappointed when Napoleon Bonaparte, whom he had originally seen as a great liberator, arrogated to himself the title and dictatorial powers of First Consul and became "the grave-digger of the [French] Revolution."

Sobered by his arrest and incarceration in a French prison, Paine wrote, "He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his own enemy from repression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."

Paine, a deist who rejected the orthodox God of theism, was a fervent supporter of democracy, meritocracy, and human rights against the encroachments of hereditary privilege and arbitrary rule ("no taxation without representation"), a staunch supporter of the separation of church and state, and an outspoken opponent of slavery.

"I have always considered monarchy to be a silly, contemptible thing," wrote Paine. "I compare it to something kept behind a curtain, about which there is a great deal of bustle and fuss, and a wonderful air of seeming solemnity, but when, by any accident, the curtain happens to open, and the company see what it is, they burst into laughter."

Paine's critique of organized religion, as expressed in his provocative work The Age of Reason, an attack on the authority of Scripture, had its roots in a strong aversion to his mother's Anglican orthodoxy, A sardonic Hitchens gleefully writes, "Freethinking has good reason to be grateful to Mrs. Paine."

Paine, as is true of everyone, was a child of his time. Living and writing more than half a century before the publication of Darwin's Origin of Species (1859) and ignorant of Kant's devastating critique of "the argument from design," Paine was unable to envision an alternative to deism. Although he stood on tiptoes, and was prescient in many areas of his thought, he was unable to envision key scientific and philosophical developments.

"On 8 June 1809," writes Hitchens, Thomas Paine died. On 12 February of the same year, Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln had been born. These two emancipators of humanity--Darwin the greatest--were in different ways to complete and round out the arguments that Paine had helped to begin."

An inveterate foe of hereditary and entrenched power, Paine is one of our founding fathers who helped plant and nourish "the tree of liberty." Hitchens argues that his Rights of Man, a work that greatly influenced Thomas Jefferson and other framers of the Declaration of Independence, is the philosophical cornerstone of the United States of America.

In the concluding sentence of this work, Hitchens writes: "In a time when both rights and reason are under several kinds of open and covert attack, the life and writing of Thomas Paine will always be part of the arsenal on which we shall need to depend."

Christopher Hitchens is a contributing editor to Vanity Fair and visiting professor in liberal studies at The New School in New York. His books include Why Orwell Matters; Thomas Jefferson: Author of America; and the international best seller God Is Not Great.

Also recommended: Craig Nelson's Thomas Paine: Enlightenment, Revolution, and the Birth of Modern Nations.
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a cogent tribute to a revolutionary thinker, October 16, 2007
By 
Eric A. Isaacson (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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Christopher Hitchen's book on Thomas Paine and his "Rights of Man" is an eloquent, yet easy and enjoyable read.

Hitchens is a masterful essayist, who produces his typically smooth, flowing and cogent prose. His scholarship on Paine is derivative, to be sure, resting on the scholarship of others. Don't mistake Hitchens for a professional historian.

And Hitchens is not terribly good, as generaly matter, about documenting where his ideas and facts come from.

Still, this book is book is an important one, because it not only treats Paine's life and ideas ably and with utmost respect, but also because it disseminates Paine's ideas to a far larger audience than scholarly texts ordinarily reach.

Hitchens should be commended for this wonderful little book.

Eric Alan Isaacson
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Thomas Paine, French Revolution, Thomas Jefferson, Common Sense, The Age of Reason, Edmund Burke, King George, United States, George Washington, Old Testament, John Adams, New York, Karl Marx, Declaration of Independence, Magna Carta, Revolution Society, The Crisis, David Hume, Marquis de Lafayette, Benjamin Franklin
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