The Short Oxford History of Italy series, in seven volumes, will offer
a complete History of Italy from the early middle ages to the present
and, in each period, will present the most recent historical
perspectives on Italian history. This means setting Italian history in
the broader context of European history as a whole. It also means
questioning accepted interpretations of Italian history in each of
these periods and, in particular, the idea that Italy's history has
been significantly different from that of the rest of Europe. Each
volume will emphasise how developments in Italy in each period are
best understood as variants on broader European patterns of political,
economic social and cultural change. This volume covers the period
from the French Revolution to the end of the Nineteenth Century.
Consisting of nine essays written by leading British and American
historians, the volume shows how Italy's unexpected political
unification and independence were inseparable from the impact of the
broader processes of modernisation that were changing the face of
Europe and the fabric of European society. The social and political
tensions that fuelled the struggles for independence were rooted in
Italy's difficult modernisation, which continued thereafter to
threaten the consolidation of the new Italian state. But Italy's
difficult modernisation did not preclude real change, and although
Italy entered the twentieth century as a highly imperfect democracy it
was not noticeably more imperfect, illiberal or divided than its
nineteenth century European counter-parts, nor did the new challenges
posed by the rise of mass society make fascism an inevitable outcome
of the Risorgimento. Italy in the Nineteenth Century provides both the
general and specialist reader with a critical but concise introduction
to the most recent historical debates and perspectives.
Les mer
1796-1900
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191586798
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
OUP Oxford
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter