One problem that contributes to shaping the world socially and politically is the rise of oppression and overwhelming power. Things such as corruption and a strong government, slavery, racial discrimination, living environment not suitable for daily life may lead to the rise of this power. "Rebellion is important because it is necessary to change the present situation if it is inefficient or unfair" (Goldstone). This opposition to repression enables reform and progress of society as a whole. People who believe that change is necessary have taken dramatic actions to gain freedom or change.
The French Revolution - the French Revolution began in 1789, it was a major political restructuring. With Bastille's attack and the rise of tertiary industry, the tertiary industry was suppressed for centuries under the dictatorship of absolute monarchy. Ordinary people. The incumbent monarch Louis XVI was abolished, imprisoned, and eventually known as a political turmoist over terrorism. (See the spark notes of the French Revolution)
Louis XVI was the King of France at the beginning of the French Revolution. The French economy struggled under Louis XVI due to heavy debt and a large cost. People started to rebel against the king as bread prices rose due to droughts and food failures. In 1792, when the revolutionary radicals dominated the French government, he was executed by guillotine. Marie Antoinette - During the revolution Marie Antoinette was the queen of France. When people are hungry, there is a rumor that she spends a lot on palaces, dresses and acclaim parties. She is the subject of many gossip and insulted by the public. At the beginning of the rule of terrorism, she was beheaded by guillotine
Marie Antoinette was a famous tragic person in the French Revolution, as her death of guillotine was forced by revolutionaries. The propaganda before the French Revolution and before the French Revolution utilized the misunderstanding that was primarily against France and Austria and was trying to use Mary Antoinette as a scapegoat for poverty and revolutionary outbreaks. She served faithfully as the French royal savior, but she was initially deeply dissatisfied with conservative aristocracy and the whole country. This poses a problem: How well do you advertise the facts of Marie Antoinette from 1770 to 1773? Of course, propaganda played an important role in brainwashing, and the Queese thought it to be a vivid symbol of moral and physical corruption and affair. But, how much does it describe and convey the actual image of Marie Antoinette?