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Marie Antoinette : the journey  Cover Image Book Book

Marie Antoinette : the journey

Summary: The Barnes & Noble Review: Was she a sexual predator, political meddler, wastrel, and traitor? Or was she a scapegoat for a corrupt and bankrupt nation, who went with superb dignity to the guillotine, the victim of a vindictive judicial murder? The tragic life of Marie Antoinette, rich in conflicting detail, remains a biographer's challenge, and Antonia Fraser's richly human yet evenhanded account is a reader's delight. In 1770, Marie Antoinette, aged 14, wed the awkward 16-year-old who in 1774 became Louis XVI. The marriage was intended to strengthen the Austrian-French alliance and produce sons to continue it. Marie Antoinette was of little use in the first endeavor; she lacked political power. Louis was of only occasional help in the second; he suffered from phimosis, an inhibiting physical condition. While the pair wandered through their doomed lives, fury built up in bankrupt France, exploding in the ferocity of the Revolution. Everybody criticized Marie, who was known both as l'Autrichienne (the Austrian woman) and l'autruche chienne (the ostrich bitch). She was regarded as extravagant ("Madame Deficit"), pro-Austrian, and childless for too long. But, as Fraser demonstrates, Versailles demanded extravagance, and in politics Marie Antoinette was more pawn than player, pushed by wily Austrian diplomats and blocked by shrewd French ministers. Fraser draws upon a huge range of sources to present a dazzling cast. Mozart, Gluck, Jefferson, Paine, Franklin and numerous others cross her pages. Fersen, the queen's discreet, devoted Swedish lover, looms large. The author succeeds brilliantly in describing how the once-vibrant Marie and the decent, despised, and irresolute Louis transformed themselves as the Revolution took its murderous course. Love of family gave them courage; love of France gave them nobility. The horrific fate of Marie Antoinette, physically abused by the canaille, viciously libeled by the blood-soaked false prophets of liberty who condemned her, reminds the reader of just how thin the veneer of civilization is - and how often revolutionaries are worse than those they condemn.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0385489498
  • ISBN: 9780385489492
  • Physical Description: print
    xxii, 512 pages, [48] pages of plates : illustrations (some color), map ; 21 cm
  • Edition: 1st Anchor Books ed.
  • Publisher: New York, NY : Anchor Books, 2002.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 479-490) and index.
Formatted Contents Note: Part 1: Madame Antoine -- Chapter 1: Small archduchess -- Chapter 2: Born to obey -- Chapter 3: Greatness -- 4: Sending an angel -- Part 2: Dauphine -- Chapter 5: France's happiness -- Chapter 6: In front of the whole world -- Chapter 7: Strange behavior -- Chapter 8: Love of a people -- Part 3: Queen Consort -- Chapter 9: In truth a goddess -- Chapter 10: Unhappy woman? -- Chapter 11: You shall be mine -- Chapter 12: Fulfilling their wishes -- Part 4: Queen and mother -- Chapter 13: Flowers of the crown -- Chapter 14: Acquisitions -- Chapter 15: Arrest the cardinal! -- Chapter 16: Madame deficit -- Chapter 17: Close to shipwreck -- Chapter 18: Hated, humbled, mortified -- Part 5: Austrian Woman -- Chapter 19: Her majesty the prisoner -- Chapter 20: Great hopes -- Chapter 21: Departure at midnight -- Chapter 22: Up to the emperor -- Chapter 23: Violence and rage -- Chapter 24: Tower -- Part 6: Widow Capet -- Chapter 25: Unfortunate princess -- Chapter 26: Head of Antoinette -- Chapter 27: Epilogue -- Notes -- Sources -- Index.
Subject: Marie Antoinette Queen, consort of Louis XVI, King of France 1755-1793
Queens France Biography
France History Louis XVI, 1774-1793

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Kirtland Community College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Kirtland Community College Library DC 137.1 .F73 2002 30775305489867 General Collection Available -

Summary: The Barnes & Noble Review: Was she a sexual predator, political meddler, wastrel, and traitor? Or was she a scapegoat for a corrupt and bankrupt nation, who went with superb dignity to the guillotine, the victim of a vindictive judicial murder? The tragic life of Marie Antoinette, rich in conflicting detail, remains a biographer's challenge, and Antonia Fraser's richly human yet evenhanded account is a reader's delight. In 1770, Marie Antoinette, aged 14, wed the awkward 16-year-old who in 1774 became Louis XVI. The marriage was intended to strengthen the Austrian-French alliance and produce sons to continue it. Marie Antoinette was of little use in the first endeavor; she lacked political power. Louis was of only occasional help in the second; he suffered from phimosis, an inhibiting physical condition. While the pair wandered through their doomed lives, fury built up in bankrupt France, exploding in the ferocity of the Revolution. Everybody criticized Marie, who was known both as l'Autrichienne (the Austrian woman) and l'autruche chienne (the ostrich bitch). She was regarded as extravagant ("Madame Deficit"), pro-Austrian, and childless for too long. But, as Fraser demonstrates, Versailles demanded extravagance, and in politics Marie Antoinette was more pawn than player, pushed by wily Austrian diplomats and blocked by shrewd French ministers. Fraser draws upon a huge range of sources to present a dazzling cast. Mozart, Gluck, Jefferson, Paine, Franklin and numerous others cross her pages. Fersen, the queen's discreet, devoted Swedish lover, looms large. The author succeeds brilliantly in describing how the once-vibrant Marie and the decent, despised, and irresolute Louis transformed themselves as the Revolution took its murderous course. Love of family gave them courage; love of France gave them nobility. The horrific fate of Marie Antoinette, physically abused by the canaille, viciously libeled by the blood-soaked false prophets of liberty who condemned her, reminds the reader of just how thin the veneer of civilization is - and how often revolutionaries are worse than those they condemn.
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