Anne Vallayer Coster: Painter to the Court of Marie Antoinette
by Eik Kahng (Editor), et al
Listed under Women Artists
Marie
Antoinette: The Last Queen of France
by Evelyne Lever, translated by Catherine Temerson
This highly readable translation of French historian Evelyne Lever's
1991 biography captures all the drama and pathos of Marie Antoinette's
short life. Born in 1755, this carefree, fun-loving daughter of Austrian
empress Maria Theresa inherited neither her mother's political shrewdness
nor her sense of duty. She was married off at 14 to the stolid, clumsy
French Dauphin, who would not fully consummate their marriage for another
seven years, at which point he was King Louis XVI and their marital difficulties
were the subject of public ridicule. She consoled herself by retreating
to the artificial village she constructed at Trianon, where she could be
free of the court etiquette she hated and indulge in expensive amusements
that only increased her unpopularity. Her rare incursions into politics
were just as ill judged; she alienated the French nobility with attempts
to further Austria's diplomatic goals, and from the first rumblings of
revolution in 1788, she influenced Louis to take a hard line on royal power
when compromise might have saved the monarchy and prevented their executions
in 1793. Lever does not soften Marie Antoinette's faults or downplay her
poor judgment, but most readers will finish this absorbing narrative feeling
very sorry for a pretty, goodhearted, but fundamentally frivolous woman
thrown into a historical moment whose demands were beyond her. --Wendy
Smith - Amazon.com
Hardcover: 352 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.17 x
9.32 x 6.41
Publisher: Farrar Straus & Giroux; (July 2000)
ISBN: 0374199388
Marie
Antoinette: The Journey
by Antonia Fraser
In the past, Antonia Fraser's bestselling histories and biographies
have focused on people and events in her native England, from Mary Queen
of Scots to Faith and Treason: The Story of the Gunpowder Plot. Now she
crosses the Channel to limn the life of France's unhappiest queen, bringing
along her gift for fluent storytelling, vivid characterization, and evocative
historical background. Marie Antoinette (1755-93) emerges in Fraser's sympathetic
portrait as a goodhearted girl woefully undereducated and poorly prepared
for the dynastic political intrigues into which she was thrust at age 14,
when her mother, Empress Maria Theresa, married her off to the future Louis
XVI to further Austria's interests in France. Far from being the licentious
monster later depicted by the radicals who sent her to the guillotine at
the height of the French Revolution, young Marie Antoinette was quite prudish,
as well as thoroughly humiliated by her husband's widely known failure
to have complete intercourse with her for seven long years (the gory details
were reported to any number of concerned royal parties, including her mother
and brother). She compensated by spending lavishly on clothes and palaces,
but Fraser points out that this hardly made her unique among 18th-century
royalty, and in any case the causes of the Revolution went far beyond one
woman's frivolities. The moving final chapters show Marie Antoinette gaining
in dignity and courage as the Revolution stripped her of everything, subjected
her to horrific brutalities (a mob paraded the head of her closest female
friend on a pike below her window), and eventually took her life. Fraser
makes no attempt to hide the queen's shortcomings, in particular her poor
political skills, but focuses on her personal warmth and noble bearing
during her final ordeal. It's another fine piece of popular historical
biography to add to Fraser's already impressive bibliography. --Wendy
Smith - Amazon.com
Hardcover: 544 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.69 x
9.57 x 6.66
Publisher: Doubleday; (September 18, 2001)
ISBN: 038548948X
Marie
Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman
by Stefan Zweig, translated by Eden Paul
Book Description: Life at the court of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
has long captivated readers, drawn by accounts of the intrigues and pageantry
that came to such a sudden and unexpected end. Stefan Zweig's Marie Antoinette:
The Portrait of an Average Woman is a dramatic account of the guillotine's
most famous victim, from the time when as a fourteen-year-old she took
Versailles by storm, to her frustrations with her aloof husband, her passionate
love affair with the Swedish Count von Fersen, and ultimately to the chaos
of the French Revolution and the savagery of the Terror. An impassioned
narrative, Zweig's biography focuses on the human emotions of the participants
and victims of the French Revolution, making it both an engrossingly compelling
read and a sweeping and informative history. "Certainly no one can arise
unmoved from the reading of this powerful work." -- The New Republic "Excellent
biography." -- The New York Times
Paperback: 476 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.25 x
9.03 x 6.01
Publisher: Grove Press; (August 2002)
ISBN: 0802139094
Marie
Antoinette & Count Fersen
by Evelyn Farr
Publisher: Dufour Editions; (January 1, 1995)
Marie Antoinette Paper Dolls
Listed under Paper Dolls
The
Private Realm of Marie Antoinette
by Marie-France Boyer, Francois Halard
Threshold
of Terror: The Last Hours of the Monarchy in the French Revolution
by Rodney Allen
Book Description:
This heart-rending story of human and political tragedy should be required
reading for anyone gripped by the drama of the French Revolution and wishing
to learn more about one of the key turning points in European history.
The
Road From Versailles: Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette, and the Baron De Breteuil
by Munro Price
Book Description: What becomes of leaders when absolute power
is wrested from their hands? How does dramatic political change affect
once-absolute monarchs? In acclaimed historian Munro Price's powerful new
book, he confronts one of the enduring mysteries of the French Revolution---what
were the true actions and feelings of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette as
they watched their sovereignty collapse?
Dragged back from Versailles to Paris by the crowd in October 1789,
the king and queen became prisoners in the capital. They were compelled
for their own safety to approve the Revolution and its agenda. Yet, in
deep secrecy, they soon began to develop a very different, and dangerous,
strategy. The precautions they took against discovery, and the bloody overthrow
of the monarchy three years later, dispersed or obliterated most of the
clues to their real policy. Much of this evidence has until now remained
unknown.
The Road from Versailles reconstructs in detail, for the first time,
the king and queen's clandestine diplomacy from 1789 until their executions.
To do so, it focuses on a vital but previously ignored figure, the royal
couple's confidant, the baron de Breteuil. Exiled from France by the Revolution,
Breteuil became their secret prime minister, and confidential emissary
to the courts of Europe.
Along with the queen's probable lover, the comte de Fersen, it was Breteuil
who organized the royal family's dramatic dash for freedom, the flight
to Varennes. Breteuil's role is crucial to an understanding of what Louis
and Marie Antoinette secretly felt and thought during the Revolution. To
unlock these secrets, The Road from Versailles draws on highly important
unpublished and previously unknown material.
Meticulously researched and utterly fascinating, The Road from Versailles
provides fresh insight into some of the most controversial events in modern
history.
Publisher: St. Martin's Press; (January 2003)
Marie
Antoinette: Writings on the Body of a Queen
edited by Dena Goodman
Book Description: Marie-Antoinette is one of the most fascinating
and controversial figures in all of French history. Married to the heir
to the French throne at age fourteen, Marie-Antoinette was at the center
of public attention during the final tumultuous years of the Old Regime
and the French Revolution. For a variety of reasons explored in this volume
- all of which revolved around her gender - Marie-Antoinette came to represent
the monarchy as it came under increasing attack. As both a woman and queen,
she became a privileged site of the political contestation and criticism
that characterized the end of the eighteenth century in France. Rather
than retell the story of her life, the contributors to this volume reveal
how crucial political and cultural contests were enacted "on the body of
the queen" and on the complex identity of Marie-Antoinette. They explore
the difficulties of Marie-Antoinette's position as a woman, a foreigner,
and a queen in the final decades of the eighteenth century and help us
to understand the waves of pornography and accusations of lesbianism, incest,
and treason launched against her. Taken together, these essays suggest
that it is precisely because Marie-Antoinette represented the contradictions
in the social, political and gender systems of her era that, through her,
we can both learn about the French past and shed new light on questions
of gender, sexuality, and female power that continue to trouble us today.
Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (March 1, 2003)
The
Wicked Queen: The Origins of the Myth of Marie-Antoinette
by Chantal Thomas
Paperback: 256 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.56 x
8.57 x 5.59
Publisher: Zone Books; (October 1, 2001)
ISBN: 094229940X
Last Days of Marie Antoinette: An Historical Sketch
by Ronald Gower
Publisher: AMS Press; (June 1986)
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Marie Antoinette 1938 VHS
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Hillary Swank, Joely Richardson.
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Antoinette, Marie