November 22, 2024

The history department celebrates the publication of Professor Jennifer Ngaire Heuer's latest book, The Soldier’s Reward: Love and War in the Age of the French Revolution and Napoleon, by Princeton University Press.

Cover of Professor Jennifer Heuer's 'The Soldier's Reward'

In this sweeping history, Heuer examines French soldiers’ relationships to family and domestic life during the period of the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars. Heuer reveals how prolonged warfare transformed family and gender dynamics and gave rise to new kinds of citizenship.

Combining social, cultural, gender, and military history, the book vividly describes how men fought for years with only fleeting moments of peace. Combatants were promised promotion, financial gain, and patriotic glory. They were also rewarded for their service by being allowed to return home to waiting families and love interests, and with marriages that were arranged and financially supported by the state. Heuer explores competing ideas of masculinity in France, as well as the experiences of the men and women who participated in such marriages. She argues that we cannot fully understand the changing nature of war and peace in this period without considering the important roles played by family, gender, and romantic entanglements.

Casting new light on a turbulent era of mass mobilization and seemingly endless conflict, The Soldier’s Reward shows how, from the Revolution through the Restoration, war, intimacy, and citizenship intersected in France in new and unexpected ways.

“In this groundbreaking study, Jennifer Ngaire Heuer reassesses the importance of war, gender, and citizenship in the portrayal of soldiering during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars,” notes historian Alan Forrest of the University of York. “Drawing on an impressive range of pamphlets, plays, and prints, she shows how the images of military masculinity and civic virtue so prevalent in the 1790s were gradually replaced by portrayals of a world without war, playing to the soldiers’ hopes for the future, their dreams of female company, marriage, and family life.”

The author of The Family and the Nation: Gender and Citizenship in Revolutionary France, 1789–1830 and the editor (with Mette Harder) of Life in Revolutionary France, Jennifer Ngaire Heuer is professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

The Soldier's Reward is available for purchase locally at Amherst Books and online on the Princeton University Press website using the discount code P327 for a 30% discount.