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The Paris peace settlements following the First World War remain
amongst the most controversial treaties in history. Bringing
together leading international historians, this volume assesses the
extent to which a new international order, combining old and new
political forms, emerged from the peace negotiations and
settlements after 1918. Taking account of new historiographical
perspectives and methodological approaches to the study of
peacemaking after the First World War, it views the peace
negotiations and settlements after 1918 as a site of remarkable
innovations in the practice of international politics. The
contributors address how a wide range of actors set out new ways of
thinking about international order, established innovative
institutions, and revolutionised the conduct of international
relations. They illustrate the ways in which these innovations were
merged with existing practices, institutions, and concepts to shape
the international order that emerged out of the Paris Peace
Conference of 1919.
Women, Diplomacy and International Politics since 1500 explores the
role of women as agents of diplomacy in the trans-Atlantic world
since the early modern age. Despite increasing evidence of their
involvement in political life across the centuries, the core
historical narrative of international politics remains notably
depleted of women. This collection challenges this perspective.
Chapters cover a wide range of geographical contexts, including
Europe, Russia, Britain and the United States, and trace the
diversity of women's activities and the significance of their
contributions. Together these essays open up the field to include a
broader interpretation of diplomatic work, such as the unofficial
avenues of lobbying, negotiation and political representation that
made women central diplomatic players in the salons, courts and
boudoirs of Europe. Through a selection of case studies, the book
throws into new perspective the operations of political power in
local and national domains, bridging and at times reconceptualising
the relationship of the private to the public. Women, Diplomacy and
International Politics since 1500 is essential reading for all
those interested in the history of diplomacy and the rise of
international politics over the past five centuries.
The story of the women, financiers, and other unsung figures who
helped to shape the post-Napoleonic global order In 1814, after
decades of continental conflict, an alliance of European empires
captured Paris and exiled Napoleon Bonaparte, defeating French
military expansionism and establishing the Concert of Europe. This
new coalition planted the seeds for today's international order,
wedding the idea of a durable peace to multilateralism, diplomacy,
philanthropy, and rights, and making Europe its center. Glenda
Sluga reveals how at the end of the Napoleonic wars, new
conceptions of the politics between states were the work not only
of European statesmen but also of politically ambitious
aristocratic and bourgeois men and women who seized the moment at
an extraordinary crossroads in history. In this panoramic book,
Sluga reinvents the study of international politics, its
limitations, and its potential. She offers multifaceted portraits
of the leading statesmen of the age, such as Tsar Alexander, Count
Metternich, and Viscount Castlereagh, showing how they operated in
the context of social networks often presided over by influential
women, even as they entrenched politics as a masculine endeavor. In
this history, figures such as Madame de Stael and Countess Dorothea
Lieven insist on shaping the political transformations underway,
while bankers influence economic developments and their families
agitate for Jewish rights. Monumental in scope, this groundbreaking
book chronicles the European women and men who embraced the promise
of a new kind of politics in the aftermath of the Napoleonic wars,
and whose often paradoxical contributions to modern diplomacy and
international politics still resonate today.
This is a pioneering survey of the rise of internationalism as a
mainstream political idea mobilised in support of the ambitions of
indigenous populations, feminists and anti-colonialists, as well as
politicians, economists and central bankers. Leading scholars trace
the emergence of intergovernmental organisations such as the League
of Nations, the United Nations, the International Labour
Organisation and the World Health Organisation, and the
corresponding expansion in transnational sociability and economic
entanglement throughout the long twentieth century. They reveal how
international thought helped to drive major transformations in the
governance of global issues from refugees to slavery and
sex-trafficking, from the environment to women's rights and human
rights, and from state borders and national minorities to health,
education, trade and commerce. In challenging dominant perceptions
of how contemporaries thought of nations, states and empires,
Internationalisms radically alters our understanding of the major
events and ideas that shaped twentieth-century politics, culture,
economics and society.
Women, Diplomacy and International Politics since 1500 explores the
role of women as agents of diplomacy in the trans-Atlantic world
since the early modern age. Despite increasing evidence of their
involvement in political life across the centuries, the core
historical narrative of international politics remains notably
depleted of women. This collection challenges this perspective.
Chapters cover a wide range of geographical contexts, including
Europe, Russia, Britain and the United States, and trace the
diversity of women's activities and the significance of their
contributions. Together these essays open up the field to include a
broader interpretation of diplomatic work, such as the unofficial
avenues of lobbying, negotiation and political representation that
made women central diplomatic players in the salons, courts and
boudoirs of Europe. Through a selection of case studies, the book
throws into new perspective the operations of political power in
local and national domains, bridging and at times reconceptualising
the relationship of the private to the public. Women, Diplomacy and
International Politics since 1500 is essential reading for all
those interested in the history of diplomacy and the rise of
international politics over the past five centuries.
This is a pioneering survey of the rise of internationalism as a
mainstream political idea mobilised in support of the ambitions of
indigenous populations, feminists and anti-colonialists, as well as
politicians, economists and central bankers. Leading scholars trace
the emergence of intergovernmental organisations such as the League
of Nations, the United Nations, the International Labour
Organisation and the World Health Organisation, and the
corresponding expansion in transnational sociability and economic
entanglement throughout the long twentieth century. They reveal how
international thought helped to drive major transformations in the
governance of global issues from refugees to slavery and
sex-trafficking, from the environment to women's rights and human
rights, and from state borders and national minorities to health,
education, trade and commerce. In challenging dominant perceptions
of how contemporaries thought of nations, states and empires,
Internationalisms radically alters our understanding of the major
events and ideas that shaped twentieth-century politics, culture,
economics and society.
The twentieth century, a time of profound disillusionment with
nationalism, was also the great age of internationalism. To the
twenty-first-century historian, the period from the late nineteenth
century until the end of the Cold War is distinctive for its
nationalist preoccupations, while internationalism is often
construed as the purview of ideologues and idealists, a remnant of
Enlightenment-era narratives of the progress of humanity into a
global community. Glenda Sluga argues to the contrary, that the
concepts of nationalism and internationalism were very much
entwined throughout the twentieth century and mutually shaped the
attitudes toward interdependence and transnationalism that
influence global politics in the present day. Internationalism in
the Age of Nationalism traces the arc of internationalism through
its rise before World War I, its apogee at the end of World War II,
its reprise in the global seventies and the post-Cold War nineties,
and its decline after 9/11. Drawing on original archival material
and contemporary accounts, Sluga focuses on specific moments when
visions of global community occupied the liberal political
mainstream, often through the maneuvers of iconic organizations
such as the League of Nations and the United Nations, which stood
for the sovereignty of nation-states while creating the conditions
under which marginalized colonial subjects and women could make
their voices heard in an international arena. In this retelling of
the history of the twentieth century, conceptions of sovereignty,
community, and identity were the objects of trade and reinvention
among diverse intellectual and social communities, and
internationalism was imagined as the means of national independence
and national rights, as well as the antidote to nationalism. This
innovative history highlights the role of internationalism in the
evolution of political, economic, social, and cultural modernity,
and maps out a new way of thinking about the twentieth century.
Whether we think of statues, plaques, street-names, practices,
material or intangible forms of remembrance, the language of
collective memory is everywhere, installed in the name of not only
nations, or even empires, but also an international past. The
essays in Sites of International Memory address the notion of a
shared past, and how this idea is promulgated through sites and
commemorative gestures that create or promote cultural memory of
such global issues as wars, genocide, and movements of
cross-national trade and commerce, as well as resistance and
revolution. In doing so, this edited collection asks: Where are the
sites of international memory? What are the elements of such
memories of international pasts, and of internationalism? How and
why have we remembered or forgotten “sites” of international
memory? Which elements of these international pasts are useful in
the present? Some contributors address specific sites and
moments—World War II, liberation movements in India and Ethiopia,
commemorations of genocide—while other pieces concentrate more on
the theoretical, on the idea of cultural memory. UNESCO’s
presence looms large in the volume, as it is the most visible and
iconic international organization devoted to creating critical
heritage studies on a world stage. Formed in the aftermath of World
War II, UNESCO was instrumental in promoting the idea of a
“humanity” that exists beyond national, regional, or cultural
borders or definitions. Since then, UNESCO’s diplomatic and
institutional channels have become the sites at which competing
notions of international, world, and “human” communities have
jostled in conjunction with politically specific understandings of
cultural value and human rights. This volume has been assembled to
investigate sites of international memory that commemorate a past
when it was possible to imagine, identify, and invoke
“international” ideas, institutions, and experiences, in
diverse, historically situated contexts. Contributors:Dominique
Biehl, Kristal Buckley, Roland Burke, Kate Darian-Smith, Sarah C.
Dunstan, David Goodman, Madeleine Herren, Philippa Hetherington,
Rohan Howitt, Alanna O’Malley, Eric Paglia, Glenda Sluga, Sverker
Sörlin, Carolien Stolte, Beatrice Wayne, Ralph Weber, Jay Winter.
Gendering European History covers the period from the French
Revolution to the end of the First World War. Organised both
chronologically and thematically, its central theme is the issue of
gender and citizenship. The book encompasses the late
eighteenth-century revolutionary period, nineteenth-century
developments concerning work, urban and domestic life, national
politics, gender in the fin de siecle and imperialism, and
concludes with the gender crisis of the First World War. Caine and
Sluga explore the question of sexual difference in relation to
class, ethnicity and race, and the development of key historical
debates about identity, work, home, politics, and citizenship in
specific national contexts and across Europe. At the same time,
they provide readers new to European history with general
information about the social and political contexts in which those
debates arose. Intended both as an introductory work for tertiary
students and one that offers new interpretations for scholars in
the field, this study is a synthethis, bringing together the
extensive but often fragmented existing literature on gender in
European history.It also raises new questions and introduces new
sources, particularly in relation to the history of gender and
nation-building. The result is a challenging view of the contours
of European history in the period from the Enlightenment to the
1920's. Barbara Caine is Professor of History, Monash University,
Victoria, Australia. Glenda Sluga is Senior Lecturer in History and
Director of European Studies, University of Sydney, New South
Wales, Australia.
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