
Europe in 1848 : revolution and reform / edited by Dieter Dowe ; translated by David Higgins.
The events of 1989/90 in Europe demonstrated the renewed relevance of the mid-nineteenth century uprisings: both by showing, once again, how a revolutionary initiative could quickly spread through different European countries, but also by calling into question the nature of revolution and the criter...
Saved in:
Other Authors: | Dowe, Dieter, (editor.) Higgins, David (translator.) |
---|---|
Format: | Online-Resource |
Language: | English |
Published: | New York, New York : Berghahn Books, [2001] ©2001 |
Subjects: |
Table of Contents |
---|
Frontmatter |
CONTENTS |
PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH-LANGUAGE EDITION |
Chapter 1 The European Revolution of 1848: Its Political and Social Reforms, its Politics of Nationalism, and its Short- and Long-Term Consequences |
Chapter 2 “The Holy Struggle Against Anarchy”: The Development of Counter-revolution in 1848 |
PART I Centers of Revolution and Reform:The Origins and Course of Events |
Chapter 3 Approaching Europe in the Name of the Nation: The Italian Revolution, 1846-1849 |
Chapter 4 The Revolutionary Crisis of 1848-1851 in France: Origins and Course of Events |
Chapter 5 Revolution in Germany: Constitutional State— Nation State—Social Reform |
Chapter 6 Revolutions in the Habsburg Monarchy |
Chapter 7 The Polish Nation in the Revolution of 1846-49 |
Chapter 8 The Revolution of 1848 in Moldavia and Wallachia |
Chapter 9 Switzerland 1847/49:A Provisional, Successful End of a “Democratic Revolution?” |
Chapter 10 The Waterloo of Peace and Order: The United Kingdom and the Revolutions of 1848 |
Chapter 11 The Netherlands and Belgium: Notes on the Causes of Abstinence from Revolution |
Chapter 12 Denmark 1848: The Victory of Democracy and the Shattering of the Conglomerate State |
Chapter 13 The Revolution of 1848 on the Norwegian Scene |
Chapter 14 Sweden 1848—On the Road to the “Middle Way” |
Part II CITY AND COUNTRY |
Chapter 15 The European Capital Cities in the Revolution of 1848 |
Chapter 16 The Revolution as Urban Event: Hamburg and Lyon during the Revolutions of 1848-49 |
Chapter 17 Political Quiet Zones |
Chapter 18 Rural Revolutionary Movements: Germany, France, Italy |
Chapter 19 The Agrarian Question in Southeastern Europe during the Revolution of 1848/49 |
Part III REVOLUTIONARY POLITICS AND POLITICS IN THE REVOLUTION |
Chapter 20 Structures of Parliamentary Representation in the Revolutions of 1848 |
Chapter 21 To Survive the Revolution or to Anticipate It? Governmental Strategies in the Course of the Crisis of 1848 |
Chapter 22 Party Formation in Germany: Political Associations in the Revolution of 1848 |
Chapter 23 Organization and “Modernization” in the Revolutions of 1848 |
Chapter 24 Power and Impotence of the Press in 1848; France and Germany in Comparison |
Part IV SOCIETY IN UPHEAVAL |
Chapter 25 Bourgeoisie, Petit Bourgeoisie,Workers: Class Formation and Social Reform in Germany and France |
Chapter 26 Women’s Spaces in the Men’s Revolution of 1848 |
Chapter 27 Civic Guards in the European Revolutions of 1848 |
Chapter 28 The Role of the Military in the European Revolutions of 1848 |
Chapter 29 Churches, the Faithful, and the Politics of Religion in the Revolution of 1848 |
Chapter 30 Educational Reform as Social Reform:The Revolution of 1848 as a Turning-Point in the History of Education |
Chapter 31 Progress and its Limits: The Revolution of 1848 and European Jewry |
Chapter 32 Public Meeting Democracy in 1848 |
Chapter 33 The Revolution of 1848 as “Politics of the Streets” |
Chapter 34 Revolutionary Festivals in Germany and Italy |
Chapter 35 “Speaking is a Deed for You.”Words and Action in the Revolution of 1848 |
Chapter 36 On the Loose:The Impact of Rumors and Mouchards in the Ardèche during the Second Republic |
Part V CONSEQUENCES OF THE REVOLUTION OF 1848 |
Chapter 37 On the Tradition of 1848 in Socialism |
Chapter 38 1848 in European Collective Memory |
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS |
CONTRIBUTORS |
INDEX |