John Merriman is Charles Seymour Professor of History at Yale University. Specializing in French and modern European history, he received his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. His publications include The Agony of the Republic: The Repression of the Left in Revolutionary France, 1848-1851, A History of Modern Europe Since the Renaissance, and Police Stories: Making the French State, 1815-1851. He is currently at work on Dynamite: Emile Henry, the Café Terminus, and the Origins of Modern Terrorism in Fin-de-Siecle Paris. In 2000, Professor Merriman was the recipient of the Yale University Byrnes-Sewall Teaching Prize.
1. Introduction
2. The Paris Commune and Its Legacy
3. Centralized State and Republic
4. A Nation? Peasants, Language, and French Identity
5. The Waning of Religious Authority
6. Workshop and Factory
7. Mass Politics and the Political Challenge from the Left
8. Dynamite Club: The Anarchists
9. General Boulanger and Captain Dreyfus
10. Cafés and the Culture of Drink
11. Paris and the Belle Époque
12. French Imperialism (Guest Lecture by Charles Keith)
13. The Origins of World War I
14. Trench Warfare
15. The Home Front
16. The Great War, Grief, and Memory (Guest Lecture by Bruno Cabanes)
17. The Popular Front
18. The Dark Years: Vichy France
19. Resistance
20. Battles For and Against Americanization
21. Vietnam and Algeria
22. Charles De Gaulle
23. May 1968
24. Immigration