The Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu: Humanitarian Despotism and the Conditions of Modern Tyranny

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Lexington Books, 2003 - History - 392 pages
The Dialogue in Hell between Montesquieu and Machiavelli is the source of the world's most infamous literary forgery, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. John Waggoner's superb translation of and commentary on Joly's Dialogue--the first faithful translation in English--seeks not only to update the sordid legacy of the Protocols but to redeem Joly's original work for serious study in its own right, rather than through the lens of antisemitism. Waggoner's work vindicates a man who was neither an antisemite nor a supporter of the kind of tyrannical politics the Protocols subsequently served and presents Maurice Joly, once much maligned and too long ignored, as one of the nineteenth century's foremost political thinkers.
 

Contents

THE ESSENTIAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MACHIAVELLI AND MONTESQUIEU
155
AN ELABORATION OF THE RESPECTIVE POLITICAL TEACHINGS
175
The New Machiavellian Founding
193
THE POLITICAL REVOLUTION I
195
THE POLITICAL REVOLUTION II
215
THE ECONOMIC REVOLUTION
233
THE MORAL REVOLUTION
253
The SaintSimonian Elements in the New Modes and Orders
265
Joly and the Portrait of Machiavelli
293
The Dialogue and History
321
Solving the Enigma of Louis Napoleon
323
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
355
Macaulays Machiavelli
369
Selected Bibliography
377
Index to Dialogue In Hell
381
Index to Commentary
385

THE SAINTSEMONIAN HISTORICAL ELEMENTS
267
THE SAINTSIMONIAN RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS
279
The Drama of the Dialogue
291
About the Author
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