German History, 1770-1866

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Clarendon Press, 1989 - 969 страници
This volume in the Oxford History of Modern Europe is a comprehensive study of German history from 1770 to 1866. It examines the manner in which the development of bureaucratic and participatory institutions changed the character and capacities of governments throughout German Europe; the economic expansion in which the productivity of both agriculture and manufacturing increased, commercial activity intensified, and urban growth was encouraged; and the rising culture of print, which sustained new developments in literature, philosophy, and scholarship, and helped transform the rules and procedures of everyday life. These developments, it is argued, led to an erosion of the traditional values and institutions, and played an important part in the transformation of German politics, society, and culture. Rather than viewing the development of a Prussian-led Nation State as "natural" or inevitable, the book emphasizes alternative forces of unity and division which existed up until the Austro-Prussian War of 1866.
 

Съдържание

EIGHTEENTHCENTURY POLITICS
11
EIGHTEENTHCENTURY SOCIETY
72
EIGHTEENTHCENTURY CULTURE
79
24
87
41
96
55
105
72
115
105
125
CULTURE IN THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA
324
RESTORATION POLITICS 18151830
391
GROWTH AND STAGNATION IN GERMAN
451
THE CULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT AND
524
THE GROWTH OF PARTICIPATORY POLITICS
588
Germans and the Revolution
604
SOCIETY IN THE AGE OF THE BÜRGERTUM
730
CULTURE IN THE AGE OF THE BÜRGERTUM
793

Philosophy and Religion
174
The Origins of a Political Public
190
CONFRONTATION AND DEFEAT
209
MASTERING THE REVOLUTION
251
POLITICAL OPPORTUNITIES AND ALTERNATIVES
853
CONCLUSION
912
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Информация за автора (1989)

James J. Sheehan is Dickason Professor of Humanities at Stanford University.

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