The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 1, The Nineteenth Century

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 1, The Nineteenth Century
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 523
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781107097759
ISBN-13 : 1107097754
Rating : 4/5 (59 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 1, The Nineteenth Century by : Warren Breckman

Presents an authoritative and comprehensive survey of the major themes, thinkers, and movements in modern European intellectual history.

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 1, The Nineteenth Century

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 1, The Nineteenth Century
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 523
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781108589468
ISBN-13 : 1108589464
Rating : 4/5 (68 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 1, The Nineteenth Century by : Warren Breckman

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought is an authoritative and comprehensive exploration of the themes, thinkers and movements that shaped our intellectual world in the late-eighteenth and nineteenth century. Representing both individual figures and the contexts within which they developed their ideas, each essay is written in a clear accessible style by leading scholars in the field and offers both originality and interpretive insight. This first volume surveys late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century European intellectual history, focusing on the profound impact of the Enlightenment on European intellectual life. Spanning twenty chapters, it covers figures such as Kant, Hegel, Wollstonecraft, and Darwin, major political and intellectual movements such as Romanticism, Socialism, Liberalism and Feminism, and schools of thought such as Historicism, Philology, and Decadence. Renouncing a single 'master narrative' of European thought across the period, Warren Breckman and Peter E. Gordon establish a formidable new multi-faceted vision of European intellectual history for the global modern age.

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 597
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781108638609
ISBN-13 : 1108638600
Rating : 4/5 (09 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century by : Peter E. Gordon

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought is an authoritative and comprehensive exploration of the themes, thinkers and movements that shaped our intellectual world in the late-eighteenth and nineteenth century. Representing both individual figures and the contexts within which they developed their ideas, each essay is written in a clear accessible style by leading scholars in the field and offers both originality and interpretive insight. This second volume surveys twentieth-century European intellectual history, conceived as a crisis in modernity. Comprised of twenty-one chapters, it focuses on figures such as Freud, Heidegger, Adorno and Arendt, surveys major schools of thought including Phenomenology, Existentialism, and Conservatism, and discusses critical movements such as Postcolonialism, , Structuralism, and Post-structuralism. Renouncing a single 'master narrative' of European thought across the period, Peter E. Gordon and Warren Breckman establish a formidable new multi-faceted vision of European intellectual history for the global modern age.

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century

The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 597
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781107097780
ISBN-13 : 1107097789
Rating : 4/5 (80 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century by : Warren Breckman

An authoritative and comprehensive survey of the major themes, thinkers, and movements in modern European intellectual history.

The Cambridge History of Nineteenth-Century Political Thought

The Cambridge History of Nineteenth-Century Political Thought
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 1156
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0521430569
ISBN-13 : 9780521430562
Rating : 4/5 (69 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cambridge History of Nineteenth-Century Political Thought by : Gareth Stedman Jones

This major work of academic reference provides the first comprehensive survey of political thought in Europe, North America and Asia in the century following the French Revolution. Written by a distinguished team of international scholars, this Cambridge History is the latest in a sequence of volumes firmly established as the principal reference source for the history of political thought. In a series of scholarly but accessible essays, every major theme in nineteenth-century political thought is covered, including political economy, religion, democratic radicalism, nationalism, socialism and feminism. The volume also includes studies of major figures, including Hegel, Mill, Bentham and Marx, and biographical notes on every significant thinker in the period. Of interest to students and scholars of politics and history at all levels, this volume explores seismic changes in the languages and expectations of politics accompanying political revolution, industrialisation and imperial expansion and less-noted continuities in political and social thinking.

Music in European Thought 1851-1912

Music in European Thought 1851-1912
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 442
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0521230500
ISBN-13 : 9780521230506
Rating : 4/5 (00 Downloads)

Synopsis Music in European Thought 1851-1912 by : Bojan Bujic

This volume, in the series Cambridge Readings in the Literature of Music, is an anthology of original German, French and English writings from the period 1851-1912. Throughout the second half of the nineteenth century music continued to be a subject to which philosophers, psychologists, scientists and critics repeatedly addressed themselves. Some of the philosophical approaches followed the tradition of the German speculative philosophy of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Elsewhere the new 'scientific' climate of the nineteenth century left its mark on the work of scientists and psychologists interested in the impact of acoustical stimuli on the human mind or in the role of music and song in the prehistory of mankind.

Marx and We

Marx and We
Author :
Publisher : American Academic Press
Total Pages : 325
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781631814945
ISBN-13 : 163181494X
Rating : 4/5 (45 Downloads)

Synopsis Marx and We by : Sun Zhengyu

Marxist ideology is the only fully scientific ideology, the only one able to guide mankind toward the settlement of fundamental social problems and to point out the royal road for the proletariat to take in its march toward socialism and communism. Without Marxism, modern people cannot establish true social ideals, nor can they engage in the rational pursuit of values. Without Marxism, modern people cannot choose the correct path of development, nor can they build up new forms of civilizations. Without Marxism, modern people would never base their commitments to schedule the consensus-building effort and support the consensus-building process on any irrefutably and sufficiently sound theoretical foundations.

Civilization

Civilization
Author :
Publisher : McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages : 391
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780228012887
ISBN-13 : 0228012880
Rating : 4/5 (87 Downloads)

Synopsis Civilization by : E.A. Heaman

Colonial Canada changed enormously between the 1760s and the 1860s, the Conquest and Confederation, but the idea of civilization seen to guide those transformations changed still more. A cosmopolitan and optimistic theory of history was written into the founding Canadian constitution as a check on state violence, only to be reversed and undone over the next century. Civilization was hegemony, a contradictory theory of unrestrained power and restraints on that power. Occupying a middle ground between British and American hegemonies, all the different peoples living in Canada felt those contradictions very sharply. Both Britain and America came to despair of bending Canada violently to their will, and new forms of hegemony, a greater reckoning with soft power, emerged in the wake of those failures. E.A. Heaman shows that the view from colonial Canada matters for intellectual and political history. Canada posed serious challenges to the Scottish Enlightenment, the Pax Britannica, American manifest destiny, and the emerging model of the nation-state. David Hume’s theory of history shaped the Canadian imaginary in constitutional documents, much-thumbed histories, and a certain liberal-conservative political and financial orientation. But as settlers flooded across the continent, cosmopolitanism became chauvinism, and the idea of civilization was put to accomplishing plunder and predation on a transcontinental scale. Case studies show crucial moments of conceptual reversal, some broadly representative and some unique to Canada. Dissecting the Seven Years’ War, domestic relations, the fiscal military state, liberal reform, social statistics, democracy, constitutionalism, and scholarly history, Heaman shows how key British and Canadian public figures grappled with the growing gap between theory and practice. By historicizing the concept of civilization, this book connects Enlightenment ideals and anti-colonialism, shown in contest with colonialism in Canada before Confederation.

Haydn and Mozart in the Long Nineteenth Century

Haydn and Mozart in the Long Nineteenth Century
Author :
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Total Pages : 267
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781009254373
ISBN-13 : 1009254375
Rating : 4/5 (73 Downloads)

Synopsis Haydn and Mozart in the Long Nineteenth Century by : Simon Keefe