A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe: Volume I: Negotiating Modernity in the 'Long Nineteenth Century'

A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe

Volume I: Negotiating Modernity in the 'Long Nineteenth Century'
 
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780198737148
ISBN10:0198737149
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:696 pages
Size:240x162x42 mm
Weight:1 g
Language:English
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Short description:

The volume offers the first-ever synthetic overview of the history of modern political thought in East Central Europe.

Long description:
A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe is a two-volume project, authored by an international team of researchers, and offering the first-ever synthetic overview of the history of modern political thought in East Central Europe. Covering twenty national cultures and languages, the ensuing work goes beyond the conventional nation-centered narrative and offers a novel vision especially sensitive to the cross-cultural entanglement of discourses. Devising a regional perspective, the authors avoid projecting the Western European analytical and conceptual schemes on the whole continent, and develop instead new concepts, patterns of periodization and interpretative models. At the same time, they also reject the self-enclosing Eastern or Central European regionalist narratives and instead emphasize the multifarious dialogue of the region with the rest of the world. Along these lines, the two volumes are intended to make these cultures available for the global 'market of ideas' and also help rethinking some of the basic assumptions about the history of modern political thought, and modernity as such.

The first volume deals with the period ranging from the Late Enlightenment to the First World War. It is structured along four broader chronological and thematic units: Enlightenment reformism, Romanticism and the national revivals, late nineteenth-century institutionalization of the national and state-building projects, and the new ideologies of the fin-de-si?cle facing the rise of mass politics. Along these lines, the authors trace the continuities and ruptures of political discourses. They focus especially on the ways East Central European political thinkers sought to bridge the gap between the idealized Western type of modernity and their own societies challenged by overlapping national projects, social and cultural fragmentation, and the lack of institutional continuity.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
The Politics of Improvement: European Models and Local Traditions
National Projects and Civilizational Hierarchies
The Repercussions of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars
?Playing the Piano that Does Not Yet Have Strings?? The Cultural-Political Programs of the ?National Revivals?
Political Visions of the Vormärz
Brotherhood and Disappointment: 1848 and its Aftermath
The Interplay of National and Imperial Principles of Organization
The Political Implications of Positivism
The Rise and Fall of ?National Liberalism? After 1848
Liberals and Mass Politics
The Left and the Ambiguity of the Marxist Package
Conservatisms, New and Old
Coping with Diversity
The Faces of Modernity
The Great War