"[<i>The Holy Alliance</i>] fully inhabits the feverish world of the postwar 1810s and 1820s."<b>---James Stafford, <i>London Review of Books</i></b>

"[A] stimulating volume. . . . Recommended."

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A major new account of the post-Napoleonic Holy Alliance and the promise it held for liberals

The Holy Alliance is now most familiar as a label for conspiratorial reaction. In this book, Isaac Nakhimovsky reveals the Enlightenment origins of this post-Napoleonic initiative, explaining why it was embraced at first by many contemporary liberals as the birth of a federal Europe and the dawning of a peaceful and prosperous age of global progress. Examining how the Holy Alliance could figure as both an idea of progress and an emblem of reaction, Nakhimovsky offers a novel vantage point on the history of federative alternatives to the nation state. The result is a clearer understanding of the recurring appeal of such alternatives—and the reasons why the politics of federation has also come to be associated with entrenched resistance to liberalism’s emancipatory aims.

Nakhimovsky connects the history of the Holy Alliance with the better-known transatlantic history of eighteenth-century constitutionalism and nineteenth-century efforts to abolish slavery and war. He also shows how the Holy Alliance was integrated into a variety of liberal narratives of progress. From the League of Nations to the Cold War, historical analogies to the Holy Alliance continued to be drawn throughout the twentieth century, and Nakhimovsky maps how some of the fundamental political problems raised by the Holy Alliance have continued to reappear in new forms under new circumstances. Time will tell whether current assessments of contemporary federal systems seem less implausible to future generations than initial liberal expectations of the Holy Alliance do to us today.

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“A dazzling, revisionary reconstruction of the Holy Alliance as arguably the earliest attempt to institute a liberal international order thoroughly recognizable to twentieth- and twenty-first-century observers. Nakhimovsky’s astounding account of its global ambition, emancipatory hopes, and eventual failures offers sober political lessons for our own time.”—Karuna Mantena, Columbia University

“A hugely impressive achievement: a serious, deeply learned, but also imaginatively important, new book about old politics and the ways it still, in fact, lingers on in the present.”—Duncan Kelly, University of Cambridge
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780691195193
Publisert
2024-05-28
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Isaac Nakhimovsky is associate professor of history and humanities at Yale University. He is the author of The Closed Commercial State: Perpetual Peace and Commercial Society from Rousseau to Fichte (Princeton).