Ideias de Revolução na Era das Revoluções Atlânticas 

Tradução: Publicado por Cambridge University Press. Perl-Rosenthal N. Ideas of Revolution in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions. Modern Intellectual History. 2023;20(4):997-1022. doi:10.1017/S1479244323000070.

Authors

  • Daniel Gomes de Carvalho USP , University of São Paulo image/svg+xml
  • Felipe Oliverio Bergonso Universidade de São Paulo , University of São Paulo image/svg+xml
  • Guilherme Farias Ghefter Universidade de São Paulo , University of São Paulo image/svg+xml
  • Nathan Perl-Rosenthal University of Southern California , University of Southern California image/svg+xml

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36449/0jafs237

Abstract

This article examines the concepts of revolution that political actors employed during the age of Atlantic revolutions (c.1760–1830) and how they used these concepts to analyze, compare, and connect the era's political events. The article begins by briefly recapitulating the evolving meanings of revolution in the seventeenth century and the early eighteenth. The capacious concept of a “revolution of government” that developed in the eighteenth century remained in regular use into the 1820s as a key conceptual tool to imaginatively connect otherwise disparate political movements/phenomena. Revolutionaries also created two new concepts, “total” and “limited” revolution, that were crucial to drawing political distinctions, especially between the American and French revolutions. These three concepts of revolution, I argue, all gave late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century actors an unusual degree of flexibility—which did not exist before or after the period—in describing the temporal and causal dynamics of revolutionary change.

Author Biographies

  • Daniel Gomes de Carvalho, USP, University of São Paulo

    Daniel Gomes de Carvalho é doutor em história social pela Universidade de São Paulo e professor de História Moderna na mesma Universidade. E-mail:  daniel.gomes.carvalho@usp.br, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6803-5811. 

  • Felipe Oliverio Bergonso, Universidade de São Paulo, University of São Paulo

    Mestrando em História Social na Universidade de São Paulo - USP, com fomento da FAPESP a partir do projeto nº 2026/02600-5. E-mail: felipeoliverio@usp.br, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0008-9180-1431

  • Guilherme Farias Ghefter, Universidade de São Paulo, University of São Paulo

    Mestrando em História Social na Universidade de São Paulo - USP, com fomento da FAPESP a partir do projeto nº 2026/03412-8. E-mail: guiguighefter@usp.br, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0008-3123-640X

  • Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, University of Southern California, University of Southern California

    Doutor em história na Columbia University e professor na University of Southern California (USC Dornsife). Sua pesquisa concentra-se na história política e cultural da Europa e das Américas na era das revoluções, com atenção especial às influências transnacionais que moldaram a política nacional moderna. E-mail: perlrose@usc.edu

Published

03/06/2026

How to Cite

NATHAN PERL-ROSENTHAL. Ideias de Revolução na Era das Revoluções Atlânticas : Tradução: Publicado por Cambridge University Press. Perl-Rosenthal N. Ideas of Revolution in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions. Modern Intellectual History. 2023;20(4):997-1022. doi:10.1017/S1479244323000070. Tempos Históricos, [S. l.], v. 29, n. 2, p. 320–361, 2026. DOI: 10.36449/0jafs237. Disponível em: https://saber.unioeste.br/index.php/temposhistoricos/article/view/36379. Acesso em: 16 jun. 2026.