Produktbild: A History of Western Society, Volume 2

A History of Western Society, Volume 2

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

15.05.2024

Seitenzahl

708

Maße (L/B/H)

21,5/27,6/3,1 cm

Gewicht

1444 g

Auflage

14 Auflage Fourteenth Edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-319-34371-2

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

15.05.2024

Seitenzahl

708

Maße (L/B/H)

21,5/27,6/3,1 cm

Gewicht

1444 g

Auflage

14 Auflage Fourteenth Edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-319-34371-2

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: A History of Western Society, Volume 2
  • The Combined Volume includes all chapters.

    Volume 1 includes Chapters 1-16.

    Volume 2 includes Chapters 14-30.

    Since 1300 includes Chapters 11-30.

     

    Preface

    Maps, Figures, and Tables

    Special Features 

     

    Chapter 14: European Exploration and Conquest, 1450-1650

    What was the Afro-Eurasian trading world before Columbus?

          The Trade World of the Indian Ocean

          The Trading States of Africa

          The Middle East

          Genoese and Venetian Middlemen

    How and why did Europeans undertake ambitious voyages of expansion?

          Causes of European Expansion

          Technology and the Rise of Exploration

          The Portuguese Overseas Empire

          Spain's Voyages to the Americas

          Spain "Discovers" the Pacific

          Early Exploration by Northern European Powers

    What was the impact of European conquest on the New World?

          Conquest of the Aztec Empire

          The Fall of the Incas

          Portuguese Brazil

          Colonial Empires of England and France

          Colonial Administration

    How did Europe and the world change after Columbus?

          Economic Exploitation of the Indigenous Population

          Society in the Colonies

          Population Loss and the Ecological Impacts of Contact

          Sugar and Slavery

          Spanish Silver and Its Economic Effects

          The Birth of the Global Economy

    How did expansion change European attitudes and beliefs?

          Religious Conversion

          European Debates About Indigenous Peoples

          New Ideas About Race

          Michel de Montaigne and Cultural Curiosity

          William Shakespeare and His Influence

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Columbus Describes His First Voyage

    Thinking Like a Historian: Who Was Doña Marina?

    Individuals in Society: Catarina de San Juan

    Viewpoints: Aztec and Spanish Views on Christian Conversion in New Spain

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Andrés Sánchez Gallque, The Mulatto Gentlemen of Esmeraldas, 1599

     

    Chapter 15: Absolutism and Constitutionalism, ca. 1589-1725

    What were the crises and achievements of seventeenth-century European states?

          The Social Order and Peasant Life

          Environmental, Economic, and Social Crisis

          The Thirty Years' War

          State-Building and the Growth of Armies

          Baroque Art and Music

    What was absolutism, and how did it evolve in western and central Europe?

          The Decline of Absolutist Spain in the Seventeenth Century

          The Foundations of French Absolutism

          Louis XIV and Absolutism

          Life at Versailles

          Louis XIV's Wars

          The French Economic Policy of Mercantilism

    What explains the rise of absolutism in Prussia and Austria?

          The Return of Serfdom

          The Austrian Habsburgs

          Prussia in the Seventeenth Century

          The Consolidation of Prussian Absolutism

    What were the distinctive features of Russian and Ottoman absolutism?

          Mongol Rule in Russia and the Rise of Moscow

          Building the Russian Empire

          The Reforms of Peter the Great

          The Ottoman Empire

    What were alternatives to absolutism in early modern Europe?

          The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

          The Failure of Absolutism in England

          The Puritan Protectorate

          The Restoration of the English Monarchy

          Constitutional Monarchy

          The Dutch Republic in the Seventeenth Century

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Thinking Like a Historian: What Was Absolutism?

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Peter the Great and Foreign Experts

    Individuals in Society: Hürrem

    Viewpoints: Stuart Claims to Absolutism and the Parliamentary Response

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Gonzales Coques, The Young Scholar and His Wife, 1640

     

    Chapter 16: Toward a New Worldview, 1540-1789

    What revolutionary discoveries were made in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?

          Contributions from the Muslim World

          Scientific Thought to 1500

          The Copernican Hypothesis

          Brahe, Kepler, and Galileo: Proving Copernicus Right

          Newton's Synthesis

          Natural History and Empire

          Magic and Alchemy

    What intellectual and social changes occurred as a result of the Scientific Revolution?

          The Methods of Science: Bacon and Descartes

          Medicine, the Body, and Chemistry

          Science and Religion

          Science and Society

    How did the Enlightenment emerge, and what were major currents of Enlightenment thought?

          The Early Enlightenment

          The Influence of the Philosophes

          Enlightenment Movements Across Europe

    How did the Enlightenment change social ideas and practices?

          Global Contacts

          Enlightenment Debates About Race

          Women and the Enlightenment

          Urban Culture and Life in the Public Sphere

    What impact did new ways of thinking have on politics?

          Frederick the Great of Prussia

          Catherine the Great of Russia

          The Austrian Habsburgs

          Jewish Life and the Limits of Enlightened Absolutism

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Galileo Galilei, The Sidereal Messenger

    Thinking Like a Historian: The Enlightenment Debate on Religious Tolerance

    Viewpoints: Rousseau and Wollstonecraft Debate Women's Equality

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Léonard Defrance and the Public Sphere

    Individuals in Society: Moses Mendelssohn and the Jewish Enlightenment

     

    Chapter 17: The Expansion of Europe, 1650-1800

    Why did European agriculture grow between 1650 and 1800?

          The Legacy of the Open-Field System

          New Methods of Agriculture

          The Leadership of the Low Countries and England

    Why did the European population rise dramatically in the eighteenth century?

          Long-Standing Obstacles to Population Growth

          The New Pattern of the Eighteenth Century

          How and why did rural industry intensify in the eighteenth century?

          The Putting-Out System

          The Lives of Rural Textile Workers

          The Industrious Revolution

    What important changes occurred in economic thought and practice in the eighteenth century?

          Economic Regulation and the Guilds

          The Financial Revolution

          Adam Smith and Economic Liberalism

          How did empire and trade shape new economic, cultural, and social developments?

          Mercantilism and Colonial Competition

          The Atlantic Economy

          The Transatlantic Slave Trade

          Identities and Communities of the Atlantic World

          The Atlantic Enlightenment

          Trade and Empire in Asia and the Pacific

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Thomas Malthus on the Limitation of Human Population

    Thinking Like a Historian: Rural Industry: Progress or Exploitation?

    Viewpoints: Opposing Views on Guilds and Economic Regulation

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: New Ideas about Race and Identity

    Individuals in Society: Rebecca Protten

     

    Chapter 18: Life in the Era of Expansion, 1650-1800

    How did marriage and family life change in the eighteenth century?

          Late Marriage and Nuclear Families

          Work Away from Home

          Contraception and Community Controls

          New Patterns of Marriage and Illegitimacy

          Sex on the Margins of Society

    What was life like for children, and how did attitudes toward childhood evolve?

          Child Care and Nursing

          Foundlings and Infanticide

          Attitudes Toward Children

          The Spread of Elementary Schools

    How did increasing literacy and new patterns of consumption affect people's lives?

          Popular Literature

          Leisure and Recreation

          New Foods and Appetites

          Toward a Consumer Society

    What role did religion play in eighteenth-century society?

          Church Hierarchy

          Protestant Revival

          Catholic Piety

          Marginal Beliefs and Practices

    How did the practice of medicine evolve in the eighteenth century?

          Faith Healing and General Practice

          Improvements in Surgery

          Midwifery

          The Conquest of Smallpox and the Birth of Vaccination

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: A Day in the Life of Paris

    Individuals in Society: Rose Bertin, "Minister of Fashion"

    Thinking Like a Historian: A New Subjectivity

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Hogarth's Satirical View of the Church

    Viewpoints: The Case for and Against Female Midwives

    \

    Chapter 19: Revolutions in Politics, 1775-1815

    What were the factors behind the revolutions of the late eighteenth century?

          Social Change

          Growing Demands for Liberty and Equality

          The Seven Years' War

    Why and how did American colonists forge a new, independent nation?

          The Origins of the Revolution

          Independence from Britain

          Framing the Constitution

          Limitations of Liberty and Equality

    How did the events of 1789 result in a constitutional monarchy in France?

          Breakdown of the Old Order

          The Formation of the National Assembly

          Popular Uprising and the Rights of Man

          A Constitutional Monarchy and Its Challenges

    Why and how did the French Revolution take a radical turn?

          The International Response

          The Second Revolution and the New Republic

          Total War and the Terror

          The Thermidorian Reaction and the Directory

          How did Napoleon Bonaparte create a French empire, and why did it fail?

          Napoleon's Rule of France

          Napoleon's Expansion in Europe

          The Grand Empire and Its End

          How did slave revolt on colonial Saint-Domingue lead to the independent nation of Haiti?

          Revolutionary Aspirations in Saint-Domingue

          The Outbreak of Revolt

          The War of Haitian Independence

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Abigail Adams, "Remember the Ladies"

    Thinking Like a Historian: The Rights of Which Men?

    Viewpoints: Contrasting Visions of the Sans-Culottes

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Francisco Goya, The Third of May 1808

    Individuals in Society: Vincent Ogé

     

    Chapter 20: The Revolution in Energy and Industry, ca. 1780-1850

    Why and how did the Industrial Revolution emerge in Britain?

    Why Britain?

          Technological Innovations and Early Factories

          The Steam Engine Breakthrough

          Steam-Powered Transportation

          Industry and Population

          How did countries outside Britain respond to the challenge of industrialization?

          National and International Variations

          Industrialization in Continental Europe

          Agents of Industrialization

          The Global Picture

    How did work and daily life evolve during the Industrial Revolution?

          Work in Early Factories

          Working Families and Children

          The New Sexual Division of Labor

          Living Standards for the Working Class

          Environmental Impacts of Industrialization

    What were the social consequences of industrialization?

          The New Class of Factory Owners

          Responses to Industrialization

          The Early British Labor Movement

          The Impact of Slavery

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Individuals in Society: Samuel Crompton

    Viewpoints: The Experience of Child Labor

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: The Dinner Hour, Wigan

    Thinking Like a Historian: Making the Industrialized Worker

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Advice for Middle-Class Women

     

    Chapter 21: Ideologies and Upheavals, 1815-1850

    How was peace restored and maintained after the Napoleonic Wars?

          The European Balance of Power

          Metternich and Conservatism

          Repressing the Revolutionary Spirit

          Limits to Conservative Power and Revolution in South America

    What new ideologies emerged to challenge conservatism?

          Liberalism and the Middle Class

          The Growing Appeal of Nationalism

          The First Socialists

          The Birth of Marxist Socialism

    What were the characteristics of the Romantic movement?

          The Romantic Worldview

          Romantic Literature

          Romanticism in Art and Music

    How did reforms and revolutions challenge conservatism after 1815?

          The Greek War of Independence

          Liberal Reform in Great Britain

          Ireland and the Great Famine

          The Revolution of 1830 in France

    What were the main causes and consequences of the revolutions of 1848?

          A Democratic Republic in France

          Revolution and Reaction in the Austrian Empire

          Prussia, the German Confederation, and the Frankfurt National Assembly

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: The Karlsbad Decrees: Conservative Reaction in the German Confederation

    Thinking Like a Historian: The Republican Spirit in 1848

    Individuals in Society: Mary Shelley

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Honoré Daumier, Gargantua, 1831

    Viewpoints: Picturing Revolutionary Violence in 1848

     

    Chapter 22: Life in the Emerging Urban Society, 1840-1914

    What were the main changes in urban life in the nineteenth century?

          Industry and the Growth of Cities

          The Advent of the Public Health Movement

          The Bacterial Revolution

          Improvements in Urban Planning

          Public Transportation

    How did class and gender reinforce social difference in the nineteenth century?     

          The Distribution of Income

          The People and Occupations of the Middle Classes

          The People and Occupations of the Working Classes

          Prostitution

          The Leisure Pursuits of the Working Classes

          Faith and Religion

    How did urbanization affect family life and gender roles?

          Lifestyles of the Middle Classes

          Middle-Class Marriage and Courtship Rituals

          Middle- and Working-Class Sexuality

          Separate Spheres and the Importance of Homemaking

          Child Rearing

    What were the most important changes in science and culture?

          The Triumph of Science in Industry

          Darwin and Natural Selection

          The Modern University and the Social Sciences

          Realism in Art and Literature

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: First Impressions of the World's Biggest City

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Apartment Living in Paris

    Individuals in Society: Franziska Tiburtius

    Thinking Like a Historian: The Promise of Electricity

    Viewpoints: Émile Zola and Naturalism/Realism in Western Literature

     

    Chapter 23: The Age of Nationalism, 1850-1914

    What were the main features of the authoritarian nation-state built by Napoleon III?

          France's Second Republic

          Napoleon III's Second Empire

    How were strong nation-states forged in Italy, Germany, and the United States?

          The Unification of Italy

          The Austro-Prussian War

          Taming the German Parliament

          The Franco-Prussian War and German Unification

    How did Russian and Ottoman leaders modernize their states and societies?

          The "Great Reforms" in Russia

          The Russian Revolution of 1905

          Reform and Readjustment in the Ottoman Empire

    How did the relationship between government and the governed change after 1871?

          The Responsive National State

          The German Empire

          Republican France and the Third French Republic

          Great Britain and Ireland

          The Austro-Hungarian Empire

    What were the costs and benefits of nationalism for ordinary people?

          Making National Citizens

          The Feminist Movement

          Nationalism and Racism

          Jewish Emancipation and Modern Anti-Semitism

    How and why did revolutionary Marxism evolve in the late nineteenth century?

          The Socialist International

          Labor Unions and the Evolution of Working-Class Radicalism

          Marxist Revisionism

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: The Proclamation of the German Empire, January 1871

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Eyewitness Account of Bloody Sunday

    Thinking Like a Historian: How to Build a Nation

    Individuals in Society: Theodor Herzl

    Viewpoints: Marxist Revisionism

     

    Chapter 24: The West and the World, 1815-1914

    What were the global consequences of European industrialization?

          The Rise of Global Inequality

          The World Market

          Western Pressures on China

          Japan and the United States

          Western Intervention in Egypt

    How was massive migration an integral part of Western expansion?

          The Pressure of Population

          European Emigration

          The Immigrant Experience in the United States

          Asian Emigration

    How did the New Imperialism change Western colonialism?

          The European Presence in Africa Before 1880

          The Berlin Conference and the Scramble for Africa

          The British in Africa After 1885

          Imperialism in Asia

          Causes of the New Imperialism

          A "Civilizing Mission"

          Gender and Empire

          European Critics of Imperialism

    How did non-Westerners respond to Western expansion?

          Impacts and Patterns of Response

          The British Empire in India

          Reforming Japan

          Toward Revolution in China

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Nativism in the United States

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: European Imperialism at Its Worst

    Individuals in Society: Cecil Rhodes

    Viewpoints: White Man's Burden or Capitalist Exploitation?

    Thinking Like a Historian: Women and Empire

     

    Chapter 25: War and Revolution, 1914-1919

    What caused the outbreak of the First World War?

          Growing International Conflict

          The Mood of 1914

          The July Crisis and the Outbreak of War

    How did the First World War differ from previous wars?

          Stalemate and Slaughter on the Western Front

          The Widening War

          In what ways did the war transform life on the home front?

          Mobilizing for Total War

          The Social Impact of Total War

          Growing Political Tensions

    Why did world war lead to a successful Communist revolution in Russia?

          The Fall of Imperial Russia

          The Provisional Government

          Lenin and the Bolshevik Revolution

          Trotsky and the Seizure of Power

          Dictatorship and Civil War

    What were the benefits and costs of the postwar peace settlement?

          The End of the War

          Revolution in Austria-Hungary and Germany

          The Treaty of Versailles

          The Peace Settlement in the Middle East

          The Human Costs of the War

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Viewpoints: Poetry in the Trenches

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Wartime Propaganda Posters

    Individuals in Society: Vera Brittain

    Thinking Like a Historian: The Partition of the Ottoman Empire and the Mandate System

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Peace, Land, and Bread for the Russian People

     

    Chapter 26: Opportunity and Crisis in the Age of Modernity, 1880-1940

    How did intellectual developments reflect the ambiguities of modernity?

          Modern Philosophy

          The Revival of Christianity

          The New Physics

          Freudian Psychology

    How did modernism revolutionize Western culture?

          Architecture and Design

          New Artistic Movements

          Twentieth-Century Literature

          Modern Music

    How did consumer society change everyday life?

          Modern Mass Culture

          The Appeal of Cinema

          The Arrival of Radio

    What obstacles to lasting peace did European leaders face?

          Germany and the Western Powers

          Hope in Foreign Affairs

          Hope in Democratic Government

    What were the causes and consequences of the Great Depression?

          The Economic Crisis

          Mass Unemployment

          The New Deal in the United States

          The Scandinavian Response to the Depression

          Recovery and Reform in Britain and France

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Friedrich Nietzsche Pronounces the Death of God

    Individuals in Society: Sigmund Freud

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Georg Grosz, Eclipse of the Sun, 1926

    Viewpoints: The Modern Girl: Image or Reality?

    Thinking Like a Historian: The Radio Age

     

    Chapter 27: Dictatorships and the Second World War, 1919-1945

    What were the most important characteristics of Communist and Fascist ideologies?

          Conservative Authoritarianism and Radical Totalitarian Dictatorships

          Communism and Fascism

          The Spanish Civil War

    How did Stalinism transform state and society in the Soviet Union?

          From Lenin to Stalin

          Stalin and the Nationalities Question

          The Five-Year Plans

          Life and Culture in Soviet Society

          The Great Purges and the Great Terror of 1937-38

    What kind of government did Mussolini establish in Italy?

          The Seizure of Power

          The Fascist Regime in Action

    What policies did Nazi Germany pursue, and why did they appeal to ordinary Germans?

          The Roots of National Socialism

          Hitler's Road to Power

          State and Society in Nazi Germany

          Popular Support for National Socialism

          Aggression and Appeasement

    What explains the success and then defeat of Germany and Japan during World War II?

          German Victories in Europe

          Europe Under Nazi Occupation

          The Holocaust

          Japanese Empire and the War in the Pacific

          The Grand Alliance and the "Hinge of Fate"

          Allied Victory

    LOOKING BACK, LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Famine and Recovery on a Soviet Collective Farm in the Ukraine

    Thinking Like a Historian: Normalizing Eugenics and "Racial Hygiene" in Nazi Germany

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: Nazi Propaganda and Consumer Goods: The "People's Car"

    Viewpoints: Oratory and Ideology in World War II

    Individuals in Society: Primo Levi

     

    Chapter 28: Cold War Conflict and Consensus, 1945-1965

    Why was World War II followed so quickly by the Cold War?

          The Legacies of the Second World War

          The Peace Settlement and Cold War Origins

          West Versus East

          Big Science in the Nuclear Age

    What were the sources of postwar recovery and stability in western Europe?

          The Search for Political and Social Consensus

          Toward European Unity

          The Consumer Revolution

    What was the pattern of postwar development in the Soviet bloc?

          Postwar Life in the East Bloc

          Reform and De-Stalinization

          Foreign Policy and Domestic Rebellion

          The Limits of Reform

    How did decolonization proceed in the Cold War era?

          Decolonization and the Global Cold War

          The Struggle for Power in Asia

          Independence and Conflict in the Middle East

          Decolonization in Africa

    What were the key changes in social relations in postwar Europe?

          Changing Class Structures

          Patterns of Postwar Migration

          New Roles for Women

          Youth Culture and the Generation Gap

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Viewpoints: Cold War Propaganda

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: "Building the Republic": Socialist Realism in Postwar East Berlin

    Evaluating Written Evidence: De-Stalinization and Khrushchev's "Secret Speech"

    Thinking Like a Historian: Violence and the Algerian War

    Individuals in Society: Armando Rodrigues

     

    Chapter 29: Challenging the Postwar Order, 1960-1991

    Why did the postwar consensus of the 1950s break down?

          Cold War Tensions Thaw

          The Affluent Society

          The Counterculture Movement

          The United States and Vietnam

          Student Revolts and 1968

          The 1960s in the East Bloc

    What were the consequences of economic stagnation in the 1970s?

          Economic Crisis and Hardship

          The New Conservatism

          Challenges and Victories for Women

          The Rise of the Environmental Movement

          Separatism and Right-Wing Extremism

    What led to the decline of "developed socialism" in the East Bloc?

          State and Society in the East Bloc

          Dissent in Czechoslovakia and Poland

          From Détente Back to Cold War

          Gorbachev's Reforms in the Soviet Union

    What were the causes and consequences of the 1989 revolutions in the East Bloc?

          The Collapse of Communism in the East Bloc

          German Unification and the End of the Cold War

          The Disintegration of the Soviet Union

    LOOKING BACK / LOOKING AHEAD

    REVIEW & EXPLORE

    Evaluating Written Evidence: Human Rights Under the Helsinki Accords

    Evaluating Visual Evidence: The Supermarket Revolution

    Individuals in Society: Margaret Thatcher

    Thinking Like a Historian: The New Environmentalism