Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE RISE OF LOUIS-NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
- PART TWO STATE AND SOCIETY
- 2 Napoleon III and the Bonapartist state
- 3 The system of government
- 4 The management of elections
- 5 Preserving public order
- 6 Constructing moral order
- 7 Creating the conditions for prosperity
- Conclusion to Part II
- PART THREE THE RISE OF OPPOSITION
- PART FOUR WAR AND REVOLUTION
- General conclusion
- Select bibliography
- Index
Conclusion to Part II
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE RISE OF LOUIS-NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
- PART TWO STATE AND SOCIETY
- 2 Napoleon III and the Bonapartist state
- 3 The system of government
- 4 The management of elections
- 5 Preserving public order
- 6 Constructing moral order
- 7 Creating the conditions for prosperity
- Conclusion to Part II
- PART THREE THE RISE OF OPPOSITION
- PART FOUR WAR AND REVOLUTION
- General conclusion
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Second Empire was established and endured in part due to the political skills of its leading personalities. If the range of options open to politicians was inevitably constricted and the problems of a society undergoing industrialisation and urbanisation particularly complicated, Napoleon III and his ministers worked hard to enlarge the possibilities open to them. With a considerable degree of success, they had developed a policy of economic and social modernisation. Large sections of the community benefited from greater prosperity. However, the effect of this adventurous politics was to alienate powerful groups, which felt that their vital interests were under threat. As opposition increased, the regime had adapted, whether of the Emperor's free will, or increasingly, under pressure. It had gone down the extremely tortuous path of liberalisation and, as the May 1870 plebiscite suggested, again with considerable success. Napoleon III, himself can be allowed to sum up the regime's achievements. In a sketch for a novel found amongst his papers, a M. Benoit, who had emigrated to America in 1847, returned to France in April 1868. In America political refugees had warned him that
France is groaning under despotism and he could expect to find it debased and impoverished … Imagine his surprise!
Amazed by universal suffrage
Amazed by the railways, which criss-cross France; by the electric telegraph.
Arrives in Paris: embellishment …
He wants to purchase various objects, which are much cheaper, due to the commercial treaty.
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- Information
- The French Second EmpireAn Anatomy of Political Power, pp. 250 - 252Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001