Sources for Europe in the modern world
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Sources for Europe in the modern world
Oxford University Press, c2017
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Includes bibliographical references
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Designed specifically to accompany Europe in the Modern World by Edward Berenson, Sources for Europe in the Modern World includes over 100 primary sources. Expertly edited for clarity and pedagogical utility, the sources range from letters, political tracts, memoirs, and fiction, to essays, speeches, poems, and legal documents. Each document is accompanied by a headnote and reading questions. Affordable and flexible, Sources for
Europe in the Modern World makes for an ideal companion to Europe in the Modern World. Please contact your local Oxford University Press representative to learn about discounted pricing when Sources for Europe in
the Modern World is bundled with Europe in the Modern World.
目次
HOW TO READ A PRIMARY SOURCE
CHAPTER 1: The Age of Religious Reform, 1490-1648
1.1: 95 Theses, Martin Luther, 1517
1.2: Thomas Muntzer, A Highly Provoked Defense, 1524
1.3: Records from Calvin's Geneva, 1542-1547
1.4: Examination of Lady Jane Grey, London, 1554
1.5: "Canons on the Sacraments", The Council of Trent, 3 March 1547
1.6: The Witchcraft Trial and Letter of Johannes Junius, Bamberg (Bavaria), 1628
CHAPTER 2: States and Empires, 1500-1715
2.1: Duc de Saint-Simon, The Daily Habits of Louis XIV at Versailles, c. 1715
2.2: The Political Testament of Frederick William ("the Great Elector") of Prussia, 19 May 1667
2.3: Hugo Grotius, The Freedom of the Seas, 1609
2.4: Gerrard Winstanley, The True Levellers Standard Advanced, 1649
2.5: Hernan Cortes, Second Letter from Mexico to Emperor Charles V, 1522
2.6: Le Code Noir, issued by King Louis XIV, March 1685
CHAPTER 3: Science and Enlightenment, 1600-1789
3.1: Galileo Galilei, Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina de' Medici, 1615
3.2: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Letters from the Levant, 1 April 1717
3.3: Immanuel Kant, "What Is Enlightenment?", 30 September 1784
3.4: Adam Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, 1759
3.5: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin and Basis of Inequality among Men, 1754
3.6: Emilie du Chatelet, Commentary on Newton's Principia Mathematica, 1759 (written 1747-1749)
3.7: Voltaire, "Toleration" and "Torture" from the Philosophical Dictionary, 1769
CHAPTER 4: The Era of the French Revolution, 1750-1815
4.1: Toussaint Louverture, "Dictatorial Proclamation", 25 November 1801
4.2: Cahier de doleances, "The Third Estate of Versailles", 1789
4.3: Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, 26 August 1789
4.4: Olympe de Gouges, The Declaration of the Rights of Woman, September 1791
4.5: The Civil Constitution of the Clergy, 12 July 1790
4.6: Napoleon Bonaparte, Proclamation to the People of Egypt (With a response from Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti), 2 July 1798
4.7: Simon Bolivar, "The Jamaica Letter", 6 September 1815
Chapter 5: The Industrial Revolution, 1750-1850
5.1: Edward Baines, on the career of Richard Arkwright, 1835
5.2: Francis Espinasse, on the "Lancashire Worthy" James Hargreaves, 1874
5.3: Thomas Hood, "The Song of the Shirt", 16 December 1843
5.4: Charles Dickens, Hard Times, 1854
5.5: Young Miners Testify to the Ashley Commission, 1842
5.6: Charlotte Bronte, Shirley, 1849
CHAPTER 6: Conservatism, Reform, and Revolution, 1815-1852
6.1: Alexis de Tocqueville, Recollections , 1893, on events in 1848
6.2: Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790
6.3: Percy Bysshe Shelley, The Masque of Anarchy, 1832, about events in 1819
6.4: Flora Tristan, L'Union Ouvriere, 1843
6.5: On the death of Lord Byron in Greece, according to The Westminster Review, July 1824
6.6: Giuseppe Mazzini, Instructions for the Members of Young Italy, 1831
6.7: Lajos Kossuth, Speech at the Pittsburgh Banquet, 1852
Chapter 7: From National Unification to Religious Revival (1850-1880)
7.1: Otto von Bismarck, "Iron and Blood" Speech, 30 September 1862
7.2: Charles Baudelaire, "Wagner and Tannhauser in Paris", 18 March 1861
7.3: Florence Nightingale, Notes on Nursing, 1860
7.4: "The Abolition of the State", poster in Lyon, France, 25 September 1870
7.5: Karl Marx, "Wage Labour and Capital", 1847
7.6: Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species, 1859
7.7: Pope Pius IX, The Syllabus of Errors, 1861
Chapter 8: European Society and the Road to War, 1880-1914
8.1: Maria Montessori, Dr. Montessori's Own Handbook, 1914
8.2: Jules Ferry, Speech on Imperialism, 28 July 1883
8.3: Ismail ibn 'Abd al-Qadir, The Life of the Sudanese Mahdi, c. 1884
8.4: Mark Twain, "To the Person Sitting in Darkness", 1901
8.5: First Anti-Semitic Speech by Karl Lueger, 2 October 1887
8.6: Baroness Alexandra Gripenberg, "Concerning Finland", 9 May 1911
8.7: James B. Scott, on the Second International Peace Conference, Held in The Hague, 1907
Chapter 9: The First World War, 1914-1919
9.1: Siegfried Sassoon, "Does It Matter?" and "Suicide in the Trenches", 1918
9.2: Ernst Junger, Battle as an Inner Experience, 1929
9.3: ANZAC troops at Gallipoli in August 1915, 1941
9.4: Vera Brittain, "Perhaps" and Testament of Youth, 1933
9.5: Roger Casement's Speech from the Dock, 29 June 1916
9.6: The U.S. Protests the Germans' Sinking of the Lusitania, May 1915
9.7: John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920
Chapter 10: The Russian Revolution and the Rise of the Soviet Union, 1905-1940
10.1: Aleksandra Kollontai, The Autobiography of a Sexually Emancipated Communist Woman, 1926
10.2: Tsar Nicholas II, Manifesto, 17 October 1905
10.3: Leon Trotsky, My Life, 1930
10.4: Vladimir Lenin, The State and Revolution, 1918
10.5: Josef Stalin, "The Results of the First Five Year Plan", 7 January 1933
10.6: Nikolai Bukharin, Culture in Two Worlds, 1934
Chapter 11: Fascism and Nazism: Mass Politics and Mass Culture, 1919-39
11.1: Leni Riefenstahl, A Memoir, 1987
11.2: Jose Ortega y Gasset, The Revolt of the Masses, 1930
11.3: Benito Mussolini, Speech to the Italian Parliament, 3 January 1925
11.4: Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1925
11.5: Paula Siber, The Women's Issue and its National Socialist Solution, 1933
11.6: The Nuremberg Race Laws, 15 September 1935
Chapter 12: The Second World War
12.1: Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz, 1947
12.2: Marc Bloch, Strange Defeat, 1940
12.3: Treaty of Non-Aggression between Germany and the USSR, 23 August 1939
12.4: Vidkun Quisling, "The Nordic Revival" and "A Greater Norway", 1931 and 1942
12.5: The Massacre at Komeno, Greece, 16 August 1943
12.6: The Wannsee Protocol, 20 January 1942
Chapter 13: The Postwar, 1945-1970
13.1: Queen Elizabeth II, Commonwealth Day Message, 9 March 2015
13.2: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 10 December 1948
13.3: Sir William Beveridge, Report on "Social Insurance and Allied Services", 20 November 1942
13.4: The Treaty of Rome, establishing the European Economic Community (EEC), 25 March 1957
13.5: Ho Chi Minh, "The Path Which Led Me to Leninism", April 1960
13.6: Jean-Paul Sartre, Letter in Support of the Jeanson Network, 16 September 1960
13.7: Hungarian Government Protest and Nikita Khrushchev's Recollections, 2-3 November 1956
Chapter 14: Economic Dilemmas, European Unity, and the Collapse of Communism, 1970-2010
14.1: Mikhail Gorbachev, Perestroika: New Thinking for Our Country and the World, 1987
14.2: Enoch Powell, "Rivers of Blood" Speech, 20 April 1968
14.3: American Diplomats Recall the "Carnation Revolution" in Portugal, April-December 1974
14.4: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Copenhagen, 2009
14.5: The Helsinki Accords, 1975
14.6: Lech Walesa, The Struggle and the Triumph, 1991
14.7: Slobodan Milosevic, St. Vitus Day Speech, 28 June 1989
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