Part I. The Question of European Modernity
1. Introduction: Modernity – Europe – European Modernity
2. What is Europe?
Part II. Key Features of European Modernity Reconsidered
3. Europe’s Hesitation with Democracy
4. The Industrial and Market Revolution in Global Perspective: The
Colonial Heritage and the
Social Question
5. European Religion: The Christians and the Others
6. The European: Atom – Individual – Person – Subject?
PART III Transformations of European Modernity
7. The Axial Age and Modern Europe
8. The Great Transformation: Organized Modernity for Welfare and
Warfare, 1870s - 1960s
9. The New Great Transformation: The Global Challenge of Historical
injustice and Movements
for Collective Self-determination: 1960s – The present
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
Surveys the historiography concerning the concept of modernity and questions how modern Europe is and, conversely, how European modernity is.
Bo Stråth is Emeritus Professor of Nordic, European and
World History at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He also
taught contemporary history at the European University Institute in
Florence, Italy.
Peter Wagner is Research Professor at the Catalan Institute
for Advanced Studies and Research (ICREA) at the University of
Barcelona, Spain.
[The] authors do not resort to jargon, and though the authors’
different writing styles manifest themselves in the work, the ideas
of the whole are retained. Excellent text for historiography. Good
endnotes; no separate bibliography; good index.
*CHOICE*
A highly important work operating right at the intersection of two
major intellectual challenges of our time period. The authors help
us to further decenter our conceptions of modernity while at the
same time putting facets of European history newly into global
historical contexts.
*Dominic Sachsenmaier, Professor, University of Göttingen,
Germany*
In this fluidly written and rigorously argued book, Strath and
Wagner challenge the idea of 'modernity' that began in Europe and
then spread elsewhere. In doing so, they offer important insights
into the role of markets, trade, colonialism, and globalization in
the making of the modern world. The book 'provincializes' both
Europe and north America, the latter being the most important
twentieth century legatee and champion of European style
modernization and modernity. Far reaching in its historical and
philosophical implications, this book is a landmark in scholarly
analyses that seek to de-center Europe.
*Rochona Majumdar, Associate Professor, The University of Chicago,
USA*
'What is Europe?' ask Bo Strath and Peter Wagner in this elegant
and finely-argued book. For a stubborn many, Europe is the
birthplace of modernity, the avant-garde that anyone and any place
wishing to be considered modern must follow. Strath and Wagner
challenge this European self-praise. Working in English, French,
German and Spanish, and drawing on their expertise in History,
Sociology and Philosophy, Strath and Wagner not only provincialize
Europe but do so in ways that respect the historical specificity of
Europe. That is, they pay attention to the relative uniqueness of
processes both internal and external to Europe, both good and bad,
both ambiguous and contradictory. It remains to be seen how many of
those who insist on the discredited idea of Europe as the sole
parent of modernity will be moved by this excellent book to
reconsider their prejudices. But, whatever they do, they cannot
ignore the sophisticated argument offered here.
*Jacob Dlamini, Assistant Professor of History, Princeton
University, USA*
The volume bundles extensive knowledge, especially of recent
historiography, which sets itself apart from a Eurocentric
perspective, and thus represents a good introduction to current
research and its debates.
*H-Soz-Kult (Bloomsbury Translation)*
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