Categorii: Diverse
Limba: Engleza
Data publicării: 2014
Editura: Oxford University Press
Tip copertă: Paperback
Nr Pag: 800
The postwar period is no longer current affairs but is becoming the
recent past. As such, it is increasingly attracting the attentions of
historians. Whilst the Cold War has long been a mainstay of political
science and contemporary history, recent research approaches postwar
Europe in many different ways, all of which are represented in the
thirty-five chapters of this book. As well as diplomatic, political,
institutional, economic, and social history, The Oxford Handbook of Postwar European History
contains chapters which approach the past through the lenses of gender,
espionage, art and architecture, technology, agriculture, heritage,
postcolonialism, memory, and generational change, and shows how the
history of postwar Europe can be enriched by looking to disciplines such
as anthropology and philosophy.
The Handbook covers all of Europe, with a notable focus on
Eastern Europe. Including subjects as diverse as the meaning of 'Europe'
and European identity, southern Europe after dictatorship, the cultural
meanings of the bomb, the 1968 student uprisings, immigration,
Americanization, welfare, leisure, decolonization, the Wars of Yugoslav
Succession, and coming to terms with the Nazi past, the essays in this
Handbook offer an unparalleled coverage of postwar European history that
offers far more than the standard Cold War framework. Readers will find
self-contained, state-of-the-art analyses of major subjects, each
written by an acknowledged expert, as well as stimulating and novel
approaches to newer topics. Combining empirical rigour and adventurous
conceptual analysis, this Handbook offers in one substantial
volume a guide to the numerous ways in which historians are now
rewriting the history of postwar Europe.