Opinion par Defrance, sur les postes et messageries: Séance du 28 Fructidor, an…
So, you pick up this book expecting a dry policy paper. What you actually get is a front-row seat to a founding argument. The 'plot' is simple: On September 14, 1799 (28 Fructidor, Year VII by the revolutionary calendar), a man named Jean Claude Defrance gives a speech to the Council of Five Hundred. His topic? The total mess that is France's postal and courier system after years of revolution and upheaval.
The Story
Defrance doesn't just complain. He lays out a detailed plan. He argues the current system is slow, expensive, and unreliable. He wants to reorganize everything—routes, rates, management—to make it efficient and accessible to regular people, not just the wealthy. But the tension isn't in the logistics. It's in the subtext. This debate is really about power. Should the government have a monopoly on communication? Can private enterprise do it better? In a brand-new republic terrified of conspiracy and reliant on news, controlling the mail was like controlling the nation's nervous system. Defrance's speech is his attempt to rewire it.
Why You Should Read It
What hooked me was the sheer modernity of the problems. This isn't abstract history. It's about a society asking: How do we stay connected? How do we ensure fairness? Defrance comes off as a pragmatic problem-solver, not just an idealist. Reading his careful arguments, you feel the weight of building something from scratch. You see the birth pangs of public service. It makes you look at your own mailbox—physical or digital—and wonder about the invisible battles that shaped it.
Final Verdict
This is a niche read, but a fascinating one. It's perfect for history buffs who love seeing the 'engine room' of the past, not just the grand events. If you enjoy political drama, policy debates, or the history of everyday things we take for granted, this short book is a hidden gem. It's not a beach read, but for the right reader, it's a captivating look at how a revolution gets down to business.
Daniel Smith
4 months agoThanks for the recommendation.