European political thought, 1815-1989

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European political thought, 1815-1989

Spencer M. Di Scala, Salvo Mastellone

Westview Press, 1998

  • : hc
  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-243) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This accessible, eminently readable book provides an insightful overview of the political ideas that have shaped the modern world from the fall of Napoleon to the collapse of the Berlin Wall. The combined effort of an American and a European scholar, European Political Thought, 1815-1989 gives a balanced account not only of a range of political theories that shaped modern times but also of the historical contexts from which these ideologies were born. With a vast range, lively prose, and uncommonly clear discussion of difficult ideas, Spencer Di Scala and Salvo Mastellone provide the ideal introduction to European political thought.Beginning with post-Revolutionary France, the authors examine Restoration models and utopianism, liberalism from it earliest days through its evolution into today's apparently victorious modern ideology, the progress and problems of socialism, anarchism, and other movements critical to European history. They also handle critical ideologies that have received limited attention in other English-language overviews: nineteenth-century Jacobinism, the ideology of democratic national revolution, French and Italian popular nationalism, the influence on social science of politics, and antiparliamentarianism. In addition, the book includes clear, concise discussions of major twentieth-century totalitarian movements--Communism, Fascism, and Nazism--and of the major opponents of the one-party state. Chapters on postwar Western Marxism, East-European theoretical resistance to Soviet Communism, and contemporary European political thought in the post-Cold War world round out the work.The result is an informative tour of more than just what particular forms government has taken in Europe but also of how and why certain ideological strains shaped them. Di Scala and Mastellone bring clarity to the complicated, and often contradictory, world of political theory that has shaped Western civilization.

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