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Criteria and indicators of backwardness : essays on uneven development in European history

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  • 200 stránek
  • 7 hodin čtení

Více o knize

The two main themes of this selection of articles by Professor Hroch are the process of nation formation during the 19th century, especially in the case of 'smaller' European nations, i.e. those without statehood, and the social and political aspects of the transition from a pre-modern, feudal and traditional society to a modern capitalist one and the uneven pace of this change in the West and East of Europe. The author argues that we cannot study the process of nation-formation as a mere product of some nebulous 'nationalism'; we have to understand it as a part of social and cultural transformation, as a component of modernization of European societies, even though this modernization did not occur synchronically and had its regional specificities. Many of the papers focus specifically on the Czech case, but throughout there is an emphasis on comparative history.

Nákup knihy

Criteria and indicators of backwardness : essays on uneven development in European history, Luďa Klusáková, Miroslav Hroch

Jazyk
Rok vydání
1996
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Titul
Criteria and indicators of backwardness : essays on uneven development in European history
Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavatel
Variant
Rok vydání
1996
Vazba
měkká
Počet stran
200
ISBN10
8090096913
ISBN13
9788090096912
Série
Anotace
The two main themes of this selection of articles by Professor Hroch are the process of nation formation during the 19th century, especially in the case of 'smaller' European nations, i.e. those without statehood, and the social and political aspects of the transition from a pre-modern, feudal and traditional society to a modern capitalist one and the uneven pace of this change in the West and East of Europe. The author argues that we cannot study the process of nation-formation as a mere product of some nebulous 'nationalism'; we have to understand it as a part of social and cultural transformation, as a component of modernization of European societies, even though this modernization did not occur synchronically and had its regional specificities. Many of the papers focus specifically on the Czech case, but throughout there is an emphasis on comparative history.