Introduction
Chapter 1: The French Revolution: Defining the Nation: The Abbé
Grégoire and the Problem of Diversity in the French Revolution
Chapter 2: The Age of Reaction and Revolutions in the Early
Nineteenth Century: Arnold Ruge: Radicalism in a Reactionary
Society
Chapter 3: Industrialization and the Rise of Marxism: The World of
Textile Work: French Industrial Workers and the Labor Movement
Chapter 4: Victorian Culture and Travel Writing: Alison Cunningham:
Victorian Leisure Travel, Religious Identity, and the Grand Tour
Journal of a Domestic Servant
Chapter 5: New Imperialism: Strategies of Inclusion: Lajpat Rai and
the Critique of British Raj
Chapter 6: Fin de Siècle Culture and the New Woman: Colette: The
New Woman Takes the Stage in Belle Époque France
Chapter 7: World War I and Literary Responses: "All Quiet" on the
Don and the Western Front: Mikhail Sholokhov and Erich Maria
Remarque Respond to World War I
Chapter 8: Russian Revolution and the Soviet Union: "Ask the
Doctor!:" Peasants and Medical-Sexual Advice in Riazon Province,
1925–1928
Chapter 9: Italian Fascism: In the Name of an Italian Widow:
Nationalism, Patriotism, and Gender in Mussolini's Fascist
Italy
Chapter 10: Nazism and the Holocaust: The Herbert Baum Groups:
Networks of Jewish, Leftist, and Youth Resistance in the Third
Reich
Chapter 11: Decolonization and Postcolonial Memory: Imperialists
without an Empire: Cercles Coloniaux and Colonial Culture in
Belgium after 1960
Chapter 12: Americanization and Postwar Modernization: Adriano
Olivetti: Agent of the Italian-American Exchange in the Postwar
Years
Chapter 13: 1968 Youth Revolts: Ab-Normalization: The Plastic
People of the Universe and the Soviet Invasion of
Czechoslovakia
Chapter 14: 1989 and the Collapse of the Soviet Bloc: Why Not All
Germans Celebrated the Fall of the Berlin Wall: East German Jews
and the Collapse of Communism
Cora Granata is associate professor of history at California State University, Fullerton. Cheryl A. Koos is associate professor of history at California State University, Los Angeles.
Well-researched. . . . Bottom line: of greatest interest and
utility for beginning students in survey courses. Recommended.
*CHOICE*
This exciting collection of essays lends a fresh perspective on
enduring themes that form the core of modern European history. It
engages students in critical historical moments by highlighting the
best of the human spirit in victories, small and large, against
oppression or on behalf of creative and unusual paths to
liberation.
*Elinor Accampo, University of Southern California*
An ideal volume of selected readings for courses on Western
civilization and modern Europe. The editors' introductions to each
essay paint the broad picture, placing each in its historical
context in a manner easily accessible to students. Taken together,
the chapters illustrate the complexities and range of the human
experience, paying attention to gender and race within a larger
socio-political and cultural arena. The focus on individuals—on
ordinary women and men as agents of historical change—makes this
volume of original research unique and of great interest.
*Rachel Fuchs, Arizona State University*
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