Thomas Paine
English

About The Book

Thomas Paine (1737-1809) was England's greatest revolutionary: no other reformer was as actively involved in events of the scale of the American and French Revolutions and none wrote such best-selling texts with the impact of <em>Common Sense</em> and <em>Rights of Man</em>. No one else combined the roles of<br>activist and theorist or did so in the age of revolutions fundamental as it was to the emergence of the modern world. But his fame meant that he was taken up and reinterpreted for current use by successive later commentators and politicians so that the historic Paine was too often obscured<br>by the usable Paine. <p/>J. C. D. Clark explains Paine against a revised background of early- and mid-eighteenth-century England. He argues that Paine knew and learned less about events in America and France than was once thought. He de-attributes a number of publications and passages hitherto assumed to have been Paine's<br>own and detaches him from a number of causes (including anti-slavery women's emancipation and class action) with which he was once associated. Paine's formerly obvious association with the early origin and long-term triumph of natural rights republicanism and democracy needs to be rethought. As<br>a result Professor Clark offers a picture of radical and reforming movements as more indebted to the initiatives of large numbers of men and women in fast-evolving situations than to the writings of a few individuals who framed lasting and eventually triumphant political discourses.<br>
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