In Political Actors, Paul Friedland explores wider connections between politics and theatre in the Revolution.... Complex innovations in the theory and practice of political representation are juxtaposed with more accessible theatrical innovations before and during the Revolution; both are read as manifestations of 'a fundamental revolution in representation itself', and so connected at a high level of abstraction.... Friedland presents a wealth of interesting and often unexpected exchanges between politics and theatre.(Times Literary Supplement) Paul Friedland has developed a strong and provocative argument about how changes in abstract notions of representation—how one thing stands for another—shaped the emergence of new forms of political thought. He has uncovered remarkable and surprising parallels between changing ideas of representation in politics and in the world of theater, and also between the ideas of counter-revolutionary royalists on the one hand and the most radical Jacobins on the other. He uses these parallels to show why liberal ideas of representative democracy had such difficulty gaining acceptance in Revolutionary France.(The New Republic) Theoretical changes in theatrical and political representation also took place during the final decades of the Old Regime... but the shift in political representation was institutionalized in a single year.... Friedland achieves an impressive effect by anchoring this epistemological shift to the outbreak of the Revolution and by constructing a narrative of theatrical representation that also centers on the same year. The notorious political instability of the Revolution, and the turbulence in the French public theaters of the 1790s, were manifestations of this epochal shift in French strategies of representation. The argument, elegant and powerful, is made even more compelling by the clarity of Friedland's prose and the depth of his research.- Jeffrey Ravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (H-France Book Review) This is a book about a major conceptual development in political theory. And in terms of both argument and method, it is strikingly original and thoughtful. By focusing on an issue that was central to eighteenth-century epistemology and cultural life as well as democratic thought, Friedland succeeds in making concrete what would seem otherwise to be simply a metaphor: that revolutionary politics was a modern drama. And that makes this ambitious book itself an impressive performance.- Sophia Rosenfeld (American Historical review)