2016 - 2017

0621-1167-01
  The Long 19th Century                                                                                
FACULTY OF HUMANITIES
Prof. Iris RachamimovGilman-humanities223Sun1000-1200 Sem  1
 
 
University credit hours:  2.0

Course description
During the nineteenth century (1789-1914) Europe experienced dramatic changes: unprecedented demographic growth; industrialization and urbanization on a wide scale (first in Western Europe and the rest of the continent during the century); the creation of new modes of transportation, modern infrastructure and new technologies; political revolutions and challenges to the old order; the crystallization of important ideologies such as liberalism, conservatism, nationalism, socialism, and proto - fascism. Nevertheless, the "World of Yesterday" continued to exist and exert influence in many places: in the strength of the political and social agrarian elites; the centrality of religion and religious ritual; political and ethnic heterogeneity of large areas in central, eastern and southern Europe and the nostalgic longing for small intimate communities. The tension between a capitalist dynamic society and traditionally framed modes of life gives the nineteenth century a dramatic and turbulent character. In this course we will deal specifically with the French Revolution; the upheavals of the Napoleonic era; with the growth of nationalism; with the emergence and critique of liberalism; with demographic and economic changes; with the growth of European cities and urban culture; with revolutions of 1848-9; the political unification of Germany and Italy; with fin-de-siècle crisis with and the outbreak of the First World War

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