Reflections on the Revolution in France

“Pocock is, without question, the leading historian of eighteenth-century British-American political thought. . . . All of his skills are brilliantly employed in the Introduction. . . . In addition to being the best treatment of Burke’s thought in context, it is . . . the best and most concentrated presentation of Pocock’s own view of the main contours of eighteenth-century political thought. . . . Finally, the Reflections and other texts by Burke are then woven into this rich fabric, thus providing the reader with an understanding of Burke’s thought which is deeper and more complex (and surely more historically sensitive) than any available in the secondary literature.”
    —James Tully, McGill University

SKU
17441g

Edmund Burke
Edited by J. G. A. Pocock

1987 - 288 pp.

Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Cloth 978-0-87220-021-0
$38.00
Paper 978-0-87220-020-3
$14.00
Instructor Examination (Review) Copy 978-0-87220-020-3
$2.00

eBook available for $12.95. Click HERE for more information.

John Pocock’s edition of Burke’s Reflections is two classics in one: Burke’s Reflections and Pocock’s reflections on Burke and the eighteenth century.

 

Reviews:

“Pocock is, without question, the leading historian of eighteenth-century British-American political thought. . . . All of his skills are brilliantly employed in the Introduction. . . . In addition to being the best treatment of Burke’s thought in context, it is . . . the best and most concentrated presentation of Pocock’s own view of the main contours of eighteenth-century political thought. . . . Finally, the Reflections and other texts by Burke are then woven into this rich fabric, thus providing the reader with an understanding of Burke’s thought which is deeper and more complex (and surely more historically sensitive) than any available in the secondary literature.”
    —James Tully, McGill University

 

“Of all the scholars who currently study the history of Western political thought, no one is more fertile, eloquent, and ingenious than J. G. A. Pocock.”
    —Keith Thomas, in the New York Review of Books