Meer dan een miljoen boeken binnen handbereik!
Bookbot

Eric Hobsbawm

    9 juni 1917 – 1 oktober 2012

    Eric Hobsbawm was een vooraanstaand historicus met een focus op sociale en economische geschiedenis. Zijn werk werd gekenmerkt door diepgaande inzichten in cruciale tijdperken en maatschappelijke transformaties. Met een onwrikbare blik op de geschiedenis analyseerde hij de complexe processen die de moderne wereld hebben gevormd. Zijn literaire nalatenschap ligt in zijn nauwgezette onderzoek van het verleden en de impact ervan op het heden.

    Eric Hobsbawm
    Culture, Ideology and Politics
    The age of capital : 1848-1875
    Echoes of the Marseillaise
    The age of empire, 1875-1914
    The French Revolution
    The Age of Extremes
    • The Age of Extremes

      A History of the World, 1914-1991

      • 672bladzijden
      • 24 uur lezen
      4,3(4543)Tarief

      The book explores the 20th century by dividing it into three distinct periods: the Age of Catastrophe, the Golden Age, and the Landslide. Hobsbawm utilizes extensive data to provide a comprehensive and insightful analysis of these eras, highlighting their unique characteristics and impacts on modern history. This work stands alongside his renowned classics, offering readers a rich and vibrant understanding of the century's transformative events and trends.

      The Age of Extremes
    • The French Revolution

      • 64bladzijden
      • 3 uur lezen
      5,0(1)Tarief

      Contains pages 53 to 76 of Chapter 3 from THE AGE OF REVOLUTION, 1789-1848

      The French Revolution
    • The splendid finale to Eric Hobsbawm's study of the nineteenth century, The Age of Empire covers the area of Western Imperialism and examines the forces that swept the world to the outbreak of World War One and shaped modern society.

      The age of empire, 1875-1914
    • Echoes of the Marseillaise

      • 160bladzijden
      • 6 uur lezen
      4,0(1)Tarief

      The bicentenary of the French Revolution has been dominated by those who do not like the French Revolution or its heritage. This book deals with a surprisingly neglected subject: the history, not of the revolution itself, but of its reception and interpretation in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A Critical assumption of the book is that while it is necessary and inevitable that historians write out of the history of their own times, those who write only out of their own times cannot understand the past and what came out of it. The recent historiographical reaction against the centrality of the Revolution reflects the politics of those contemporary historians for whom progress and revolutionary democracy are dangerous concepts. Their reinterpretations, Hobsbawm argues, are misguided. The Revolution transformed the world permanently and, as recent events in Eastern Europe emphasize, introduced ideas that continue to transform it. 'The French Revolution', writes Hobsbawm, ' gave peoples the sense that history could be changed by their action... and] demonstrated the power of the common people in a manner which no subsequent government has ever allowed itself to forget.'Echoes of the Marseillaise is a stimulating mix of historiography and political analysis, a much-needed epilogue of clarity and reason to a muddled bicentenary.

      Echoes of the Marseillaise
    • A major treatment of the crucial years 1848-1875 - a penetrating analysis of the rise of capitalism throught the world. In the 1860s a new word entered the economic and political vocabulary of the world: "capitalism". The global triumph of capitalism is the major theme of history in the decades after 1848. It was the triumph of a society which believed that economic growth rests on competitve private enterprise, on success in buying everything in the cheapest market (including labour) and selling it in the dearest. An economy so based, and therefore nestling naturally on the sound foundations of a bourgeoisie composed of those whom energy, merit and intelligence had raised to their position and kept there, would - it was believed - not only create a world of suitably distributed material plenty but of ever-growing enlightenment, reason and human opportunity, an advance of the sciences and the arts, in brief a world of continuous and accelerating material and moral progress.

      The age of capital : 1848-1875
    • Culture, Ideology and Politics

      • 380bladzijden
      • 14 uur lezen
      4,4(3)Tarief

      First published in 1982, this book is inspired the ideas generated by Eric Hobsbawm, and has taken shape around a unifying preoccupation with the symbolic order and its relationship to political and religious belief. It explores some of the oldest question in Marxist historiography, for example the relationship of �base� and �superstructure�, art and social life, and also some of the newest and most problematic questions, such as the relationship of dreams and fantasy to political action, or of past and present � historical consciousness � to the making of ideology. The essays, which range widely over period and place, are intended to break new ground and take on difficult questions.

      Culture, Ideology and Politics
    • The Jazz Scene

      • 460bladzijden
      • 17 uur lezen
      4,0(3)Tarief

      From 1955-65 the historian Eric Hobsbawm took the pseudonym 'Francis Newton' and wrote a monthly column for the New Statesman on jazz - music he had loved ever since discovering it as a boy in 1933 ('the year Adolf Hitler took power in Germany').

      The Jazz Scene
    • The Age of Revolution

      Europe 1789-1848

      • 372bladzijden
      • 14 uur lezen
      4,2(5808)Tarief

      Between 1789 and 1848 the world was transformed by both the French Revolution and also by the Industrial Revolution that originated in Britain. This "Dual Revolution" created the modern world as we know it. The book traces the transformation in European life during this period.

      The Age of Revolution
    • Fractured Times

      Culture and Society in the Twentieth Century

      • 336bladzijden
      • 12 uur lezen
      4,0(8)Tarief

      Exploring the cultural fragmentation of the twentieth century, Eric Hobsbawm analyzes the clash between bourgeois fin de siècle culture and emerging ideologies such as communism, nationalism, and Dadaism. His work delves into the profound changes brought about by these movements and the rise of information technology. With his distinctive insight and engaging style, Hobsbawm provides a compelling examination of how these forces shaped modern society in "Fractured Times."

      Fractured Times
    • The classic social history of the great English agricultural uprising of 1830, from two of the greatest modern historians.

      Captain Swing