Myth of the nation and vision of revolution : ideological polarization in the twentieth century
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Myth of the nation and vision of revolution : ideological polarization in the twentieth century
(Social science classics series)
Transaction Publishers, 1991
1st paperback ed
- : pbk
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Note
Completes the author's trilogy, the two preceding works being The origins of totalitarian democracy, and Political Messianism
Includes bibliographical references and index
Originally published in the United States by the University of California Press, 1981
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In what may well rank as the finest political and intellectual history of the twentieth century, the late J. L. Talmon explores the origins of the schism within European society between the totalitarians of Right and Left as well as the split between an acceptance of the historical national community as the natural political and social framework and the vision of a socialist society achieved by a universal revolutionary breakthrough. This, the third and final volume of Talmon's history of the modern world, brings to bear the resources of his incisive scholarship to examine the workings of the ironies of totalitarianism as well as the resources of democracy.
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