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Books > History > World history > From 1900 > General
After Ruskin is the first book to explore the social and political
influence of the leading Victorian art and social critic, John
Ruskin (1819-1900). It explains how he inspired a range of
individuals to reform Britain's social and political culture in the
period between 1870 and 1920. These individuals operated in a
number of key institutions and organisations: Ruskin's Guild of St.
George, societies formed in Ruskin's name, the university
settlements, and in Parliament, particularly in the Labour Party.
Stuart Eagles helps to explain how these institutions developed,
who guided them, and their motivation, as much as it explains the
nature and extent of Ruskin's legacies. An original analysis based
on extensive archival research, this is the first comprehensive
survey of the intellectual influence of one of Victorian Britain's
greatest critics.
Though often depicted as a rapid political transformation, the Nazi
seizure of power was in fact a process that extended from the
appointment of the Papen cabinet in the early summer of 1932
through the Roehm blood purge two years later. Across fourteen
rigorous and carefully researched chapters, From Weimar to Hitler
offers a compelling collective investigation of this critical
period in modern German history. Each case study presents new
empirical research on the crisis of Weimar democracy, the
establishment of the Nazi dictatorship, and Hitler's consolidation
of power. Together, they provide multiple perspectives on the
extent to which the triumph of Nazism was historically
predetermined or the product of human miscalculation and intent.
Over the past decade, Africa's center of gravity in world
politics has shifted from mere humanitarianism to a strategic view
that posits the centrality of the continent as energy and natural
resources supplier, in the fight against terrorism and other
security threats, and in the globalization of culture. Besides
these considerations, this shift is reflective of two defining
dynamics. On one hand, political and economic reforms have
contributed to the growth of democracy, an improvement in the
economic outlook, and the strengthening of regional governance. On
the other hand, the ongoing diffusion of global power is setting
the stage for a new international order in which Africa will
increasingly matter. This book probes the importance and
significance of these developments and their implications for
Africa's international relations.
Ken Morris's journey began one cold Pittsburgh morning in 1935. In
the middle of the Great Depression, he was going to see the country
as a door-to-door salesman. Detroit was to be his first and last
stop. Life was hard and few people during this time of crisis knew
how their future would evolve. After months of unemployment, Ken
found a job at the Briggs Manufacturing Company, the toughest auto
company in Detroit. Ken could not have known then he would
eventually play a pioneering role in building one of the cleanest,
most socially progressive labor unions the world has known-the
United Automobile Workers. In Built in Detroit, author Bob Morris,
Ken's son, tells not only his father's story, but also the UAW's
story-the battles with companies, the struggles within the union,
and then the vicious attacks on Detroit labor leaders in the late
1940s. This story tells of the efforts to investigate these
terrorist attacks on Detroit's union leaders, including Ken Morris,
Walter Reuther and others. This narrative sheds new light on the
mystery of who tried to assassinate UAW president Walter Reuther.
Rich with personal and historical details, Built in Detroit
narrates a story unique to Detroit. It tells the story of a
thriving city and the factories that gave the city life. Author Bob
Morris deftly portrays many of the top labor leaders of the 1930s
and 1940s, as well as the rank and file members who supported these
labor leaders. It also provides portraits of early auto
industrialists, their companies, their henchmen and the gangsters
they hired to destroy the labor movement. In the case of the Briggs
Manufacturing Company, it shows how a company that played loose
with the law ultimately floundered, its Detroit heritage largely
forgotten.
Anne Fuchs traces the aftermath of the Dresden bombing in the
collective imagination from 1945 to today. As a case study of an
event that gained local, national and global iconicity, the book
investigates the role of photography, fine art, architecture,
literature and film in dialogue with the changing German
socio-political landscape.
From its inception, the Conference on Security and Cooperation in
Europe (CSCE) provoked controversy. Today it is widely regarded as
having contributed to the end of the Cold War. Bringing together
new and innovative research on the CSCE, this volume explores
questions key to understanding the Cold War: What role did
diplomats play in shaping the 1975 Helsinki Final Act? How did that
agreement and the CSCE more broadly shape societies in Europe and
North America? And how did the CSCE and activists inspired by the
Helsinki Final Act influence the end of the Cold War?
In discussions of economics, governance, and society in the Nordic
countries, "the welfare state" is a well-worn analytical concept.
However, there has been much less scholarly energy devoted to
historicizing this idea beyond its postwar emergence. In this
volume, specialists from Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway, and
Iceland chronicle the historical trajectory of "the welfare state,"
tracing the variable ways in which it has been interpreted, valued,
and challenged over time. Each case study generates valuable
historical insights into not only the history of Northern Europe,
but also the welfare state itself as both a phenomenon and a
concept.
The twentieth century has been fundamentally shaped by changes in
Russia, where disaster in the First World War was followed by the
fall of the Tsar. Nicholas II's replacement first by Kerensky's
liberal government then by the Bolsheviks, and the subsequent Civil
War and foreign intervention, led to the erection of a system of
state tyranny previously unthought of. The Bolshevik regime, with
its ideological hatred of other regimes, was a threat to the west
where developments in Russia were watched with both horror and
fascination.
Britain's information about this series of extraordinary events,
and about what might be about to happen next, was largely dependent
on the small number of British officials, mainly diplomats, posted
in Russia.
"Inside the Enigma" gives us a view from an unusual and privileged
angle of the history of Russia between the turn of the century and
the beginning of the Second World War. The discomforts and
privations suffered by British officials were matched by their
frustration. Impenetrable Tsarist court intrigue was replaced by a
wall of disinformation and suspicion after the Bolshevik seizure of
power. Nevertheless, what they saw and reported makes remarkable
reading.
This book provides a significant history of Italy's brutal
occupation of Libya. Using the lens of the life of the iconic
resistance fighter Mohamed Fekini, it tells the story of Libya
under Ottoman and Italian rule from the point of view of the
colonized. The story begins with the onset of Italian occupation in
1911-12, includes the crucial period of the anti-Italian jihad,
from 1921 to 1930, and continues through the postwar creation of a
united Libya under King Idris in 1947.
The first study of popular opinions in post-revolutionary
Russia, this volume is based on new documentation of OGPU and party
surveillance on the population, extracts from private letters,
diaries, British Foreign Office reports and talks leaked by OGPU
informants. These archival sources show an increasing
disenchantment of a generation, which resulted in revolution. The
population resisted the Soviet mobilization campaigns, which
promoted workers-peasants unity, the achievements of socialism and
new socialist patriotism. The Bolsheviks failed to reach a national
consensus and unite the nation around the great aim of socialist
construction. The story of the legitimacy crisis at the end of the
1920s presents an important argument in the explanation of why, in
1927, when faced with economical, political and social crisis at
home and in foreign politics, the Bolsheviks started changing their
politics in favour of the more oppressive and dictatorial
methods.
As a resurgent Poland emerged at the end of World War I, an
eclectic group of Polish border guards, state officials, military
settlers, teachers, academics, urban planners, and health workers
descended upon Volhynia, an eastern borderland province that was
home to Ukrainians, Poles, and Jews. Its aim was not simply to
shore up state power in a place where Poles constituted an ethnic
minority, but also to launch an ambitious civilizing mission that
would transform a poor Russian imperial backwater into a region
that was at once civilized, modern, and Polish. Over the next two
decades, these men and women recast imperial hierarchies of global
civilization-in which Poles themselves were often viewed as
uncivilized-within the borders of their supposedly anti-imperial
nation-state. As state institutions remained fragile, long-debated
questions of who should be included in the nation re-emerged with
new urgency, turning Volhynia's mainly Yiddish-speaking towns and
Ukrainian-speaking villages into vital testing grounds for
competing Polish national visions. By the eve of World War II, with
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union growing in strength, schemes to
ensure the loyalty of Jews and Ukrainians by offering them a
conditional place in the nation were replaced by increasingly
aggressive calls for Jewish emigration and the assimilation of
non-Polish Slavs. Drawing on research in local and national
archives across four countries and utilizing a vast range of
written and visual sources that bring Volhynia to life, On
Civilization's Edge offers a highly intimate story of
nation-building from the ground up. We eavesdrop on peasant rumors
at the Polish-Soviet border, read ethnographic descriptions of
isolated marshlands, and scrutinize staged photographs of everyday
life. But the book's central questions transcend the Polish case,
inviting us to consider how fears of national weakness and
competitions for local power affect the treatment of national
minorities, how more inclusive definitions of the nation are
themselves based on exclusions, and how the very distinction
between empires and nation-states is not always clear-cut.
An intriguing analysis of how place constructs memory and how
memory constructs place, "Remembering the Holocaust" shows how
visiting sites such as Auschwitz shapes the transfer of Holocaust
memory from one generation to the next. Through the discussion of a
range of memoirs and novels, including "Landscapes of Memory" by
Ruth Kluger, "Too Many Men" by Lily Brett, " The War After" by Anne
Karpf and "Everything is Illuminated" by Jonathan Safran Foer,
"Remembering the Holocaust "reveals the pivotal yet complicated
role of place in each generation's writing about the Holocaust.This
book provides an insightful and nuanced investigation of the effect
of the Holocaust upon families, from survivors of the genocide to
members of the second and even third generations of families
involved. By deploying an innovative combination of generational
and literary study of Holocaust survivor families focussed on
place, "Remembering the Holocaust" makes an important contribution
to the field of Holocaust Studies that will be of interest to
scholars and anyone interested in Holocaust remembrance.
This is the first full account of the transformation of Ottoman
Turkish into modern Turkish. It is based on the author's knowledge,
experience and continuing study of the language, history, and
people of Turkey. That transformation of the Turkish language is
probably the most thorough-going piece of linguistics engineering
in history. Its prelude came in 1928, when the Arabo-Persian
alphabet was outlawed and replaced by the Latin alphabet. It began
in earnest in 1930 when Ataturk declared: Turkish is one of the
richest of languages. It needs only to be used with discrimination.
The Turkish nation, which is well able to protect its territory and
its sublime independence, must also liberate its language from the
yoke of foreign languages. A government-sponsored campaign was
waged to replace words of Arabic or Persian origin by words
collected from popular speech, or resurrected from ancient texts,
or coined from native roots and suffixes. The snag - identified by
the author as one element in the catastrophic aspect of the reform
- was that when these sources failed to provide the needed words,
the reformers simply invented them. The reform was central to the
young republic's aspiration to be western and secular, but it did
not please those who remained wedded to their mother tongue or to
the Islamic past. The controversy is by no means over, but Ottoman
Turkish is dead. Professor Lewis both acquaints the general reader
with the often bizarre, sometimes tragicomic but never dull story
of the reform, and provides a lively and incisive account for
students of Turkish and the relations between culture, politics and
language with some stimulating reading. The author draws on his own
wide experience of Turkey and his personal knowledge of many of the
leading actors. The general reader will not be at a disadvantage,
because no Turkish word or quotation has been left untranslated.
This book is important for the light it throws on twentieth-century
Turkish politics and society, as much as it is for the study of
linguistic change. It is not only scholarly and accessible; it is
also an extremely good read.
Former Governor of Illinois, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations,
and twice unsuccessful Democratic candidate for President of the
United States, Adlai Stevenson played a key role in American
politics through out much of the middle of the twentieth century.
This collection of essays from Senator Eugene McCarthy, Senator
Adlai Stevenson III, Ambassador George Bunn, Brian Urquhart, Arthur
Schlesinger, and others, looks at Stevenson's past and current
societal significance.
Since the collapse of the USSR there has been a growing interest in
the Stolypin Land Reform as a possible model for post-Communist
agrarian development. Using recent theoretical and empirical
advances in Anglo-American research, Dr Pallot examines how
peasants throughout Russia received, interpreted, and acted upon
the government's attempts to persuade them to quit the commune and
set up independent farms. She shows how a majority of peasants
failed to interpret the Reform in the way its authors had expected,
with outcomes that varied both temporally and geographically. The
result challenges existing texts which either concentrate on the
policy side of the Reform or, if they engage with its results, use
aggregated, official statistics which, this text argues, are
unreliable indicators of the pre-revolutionary peasants reception
of the Reform.
Going to War overturns conventional views of the role of public
opinion, the armed forces, parliamentarians, NGOs and writers in
the formation of British debates about impending wars. It shows the
pressures and the reasons which have led to Britain's involvement
in so many conflicts.
Exam board: Pearson Edexcel; OCR Level: AS/A-level Subject: History
First teaching: September 2015 First exams: Summer 2016 (AS);
Summer 2017 (A-level) Put your trust in the textbook series that
has given thousands of A-level History students deeper knowledge
and better grades for over 30 years. Updated to meet the demands of
today's A-level specifications, this new generation of Access to
History titles includes accurate exam guidance based on examiners'
reports, free online activity worksheets and contextual information
that underpins students' understanding of the period. > Develop
strong historical knowledge: In-depth analysis of each topic is
both authoritative and accessible > Build historical skills and
understanding: Downloadable activity worksheets can be used
independently by students or edited by teachers for classwork and
homework > Learn, remember and connect important events and
people: An introduction to the period, summary diagrams, timelines
and links to additional online resources support lessons, revision
and coursework > Achieve exam success: Practical advice matched
to the requirements of your A-level specification incorporates the
lessons learnt from previous exams > Engage with sources,
interpretations and the latest historical research: Students will
evaluate a rich collection of visual and written materials, plus
key debates that examine the views of different historians
Since the nineteenth century, the development of international
humanitarian law has been marked by complex entanglements of legal
theory, historical trauma, criminal prosecution, historiography,
and politics. All of these factors have played a role in changing
views on the applicability of international law and human-rights
ideas to state-organized violence, which in turn have been largely
driven by transnational responses to German state crimes. Here,
Annette Weinke gives a groundbreaking long-term history of the
political, legal and academic debates concerning German state and
mass violence in the First World War, during the National Socialist
era and the Holocaust, and under the GDR.
Although marginal as a political force, anarchist ideas developed
in Britain into a political tradition. This book explores this lost
history, offering a new appraisal of the work of Kropotkin and
Read, and examining the ways in which they endeavoured to
articulate a politics fit for the particular challenges of
Britain's modern history.
In the first half of the 20th century, throughout the Balkans and
Middle East, a familiar story of destroyed communities forced to
flee war or economic crisis unfolded. Often, these refugees of the
Ottoman Empire - Christians, Muslims and Jews - found their way to
new continents, forming an Ottoman diaspora that had a remarkable
ability to reconstitute, and even expand, the ethnic, religious,
and ideological diversity of their homelands."Ottoman Refugees,
1878-1939" offers a unique study of a transitional period in world
history experienced through these refugees living in the Middle
East, the Americas, South-East Asia, East Africa and Europe. Isa
Blumi explores the tensions emerging between those trying to
preserve a world almost entirely destroyed by both the nation-state
and global capitalism and the agents of the so-called Modern era.
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