What a book! For heaven's sake, and your own, read it! GUARDIAN

'Brilliantly conceived and equally brilliantly written’

ASA BRIGGS

'Brilliant and wide ranging’

AJP TAYLOR, OBSERVER

'Excellent’

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NEW STATESMAN

'A book filled with pleasures for the connoisseur and amateur alike’

The first and best, major treatment of the crucial years 1848-1875, a penetrating analysis of the rise of capitalism throught the world.

In the 1860s a new word entered the economic and political vocabulary of the world: 'capitalism'. The global triumph of capitalism is the major theme of history in the decades after 1848. It was the triumph of a society which believed that economic growth rests on competitive private enterprise, on success in buying everything in the cheapest market (including labour) and selling it in the dearest. An economy so based, and therefore nestling naturally on the sound foundations of a bourgoisie composed of those whom energy, merit and intelligence had raised to their position and kept there, would - it was believed - not only create a world of suitably distributed material plenty but of ever-growing enlightenment, reason and human opportunity, an advance of the sciences and the arts, in brief a world of continuous and accelerating material and moral progress.

Les mer
Hobsbawm's brilliant history, beautifully repackaged as an Abacus History Great
What a book! For heaven's sake, and your own, read it! GUARDIAN - 'Brilliantly conceived and equally brilliantly written?

ASA BRIGGS - 'Brilliant and wide ranging?

AJP TAYLOR, OBSERVER - 'Excellent?

NEW STATESMAN - 'A book filled with pleasures for the connoisseur and amateur alike?
Les mer
Hobsbawm's brilliant history, beautifully repackaged as an Abacus History Great

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780349104805
Publisert
1988-01-01
Utgiver
Little, Brown Book Group
Vekt
294 gr
Høyde
131 mm
Bredde
200 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
416

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Eric Hobsbawm is a Fellow of the British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Before retirement he taught at Birkbeck College, University of London, and after retirement at the New School for Social Research in New York.