An Economist Best Book of the Year “Sweeping . . . an ambitious
synthesis . . . [Evans] writes with admirable narrative power and
possesses a wonderful eye for local color . . .
Fascinating.”—Stephen Schuker, The Wall Street Journal From the
bestselling author of The Third Reich at War, a masterly account of
Europe in the age of its global hegemony; the latest volume in the
Penguin History of Europe series Richard J. Evans, bestselling
historian of Nazi Germany, returns with a monumental new addition to
the acclaimed Penguin History of Europe series, covering the period
from the fall of Napoleon to the outbreak of World War I. Evans’s
gripping narrative ranges across a century of social and national
conflicts, from the revolutions of 1830 and 1848 to the unification of
both Germany and Italy, from the Russo-Turkish wars to the Balkan
upheavals that brought this era of relative peace and growing
prosperity to an end. Among the great themes it discusses are the
decline of religious belief and the rise of secular science and
medicine, the journey of art, music, and literature from Romanticism
to Modernism, the replacement of old-regime punishments by the modern
prison, the end of aristocratic domination and the emergence of
industrial society, and the dramatic struggle of feminists for
women’s equality and emancipation. Uniting the era’s broad-ranging
transformations was the pursuit of power in all segments of life, from
the banker striving for economic power to the serf seeking to escape
the power of his landlord, from the engineer asserting society’s
power over the environment to the psychiatrist attempting to exert
science’s power over human nature itself. The first
single-volume history of the century, this comprehensive and sweeping
account gives the reader a magnificently human picture of Europe in
the age when it dominated the rest of the globe.
Les mer
Europe 1815-1914
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780735221215
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Penguin US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter