|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Carola DietzePublisher: Verso Books Imprint: Verso Books Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.620kg ISBN: 9781786637192ISBN 10: 1786637197 Pages: 656 Publication Date: 20 July 2021 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General/trade , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsCarola Dietze is a fascinating storyteller. This is historical prose at its best. Despite the wealth of footnotes and source references, this book is a real pageturner. - Paul Stanner, Deutschlandfunk The story of tragic heroes, conspiracies, and how they resonant in the media that Dietze unfolds to elucidate her argument is not only enlightening--it is also entertaining for readers. - Lea Haller, Neue Zurcher Zeitung The book builds an extraordinarily careful argument about the specificities of context in the 1850s and 60s necessary to an understanding of how terrorism as a distinctive body of political thinking and practice arrived in the modern world, focusing on the field of understanding that coalesced around freedom, nation and violence in the epoch framed by the French Revolution and Revolutions of 1848. It does not fall into common trap of the available literatures, viz. to approach the 'genealogies' from an excessively presentist point of view. Instead, Dietze approaches the 1850s and 60s as a generative crucible for the conjunction of ideas and influences that need to be very carefully historicized as such if we're to have any chance of understanding the subsequent intellectual and political histories concerned. In its willingness to engage explicitly and at length with the literatures in political science as well as the writing theoretically about terrorism in general, Dietze's book has unusual strength for a historian. The book is impressively transnational in the terms that have become aspiringly normative for so many theoretically self-aware and ambitious historians during the past decade. Dietze brilliantly makes these familiar and well-established histories and perceptions strange. Another vital and original aspect of the study is its emphasis on media history and the particular characteristics of the mid 19th century public sphere -- BOTH in terms of the circulatory conditions needed for the transnational quality of the history she's trying to reconstruct AND for the key argument she's making about impact and reception. In other words, this is partly an argument about mechanics and the particular means of transmission and circulation. But it's also about the ontological grounds of political thought and political agency created out of this remarkable transnational circuitry. -- Geoff Eley, Karl Pohrt Distinguished University Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Michigan This book may well revolutionize our understanding of the origins of terrorism in the 19th century. In highly original fashion, it closely links together the actions of terrorists in France, Russia, and the United States and shows how between 1858 and 1866 two key terrorists influenced three copycats who altogether ignited the explosion of modern terrorism. The depth of Dietze's research, drawing upon archives not only in Europe and the United States, but also in Russia, is staggering. A must read for anyone interested in the history of terrorism. -- Richard Bach Jensen, Louisiana Scholars' College at Northwestern State University, author of <i>The Battle against Anarchist Terrorism</i> ""The book builds an extraordinarily careful argument about the specificities of context in the 1850s and 60s necessary to an understanding of how terrorism as a distinctive body of political thinking and practice arrived in the modern world, focusing on the field of understanding that coalesced around ""freedom, nation and violence"" in the epoch framed by the French Revolution and Revolutions of 1848. It does not fall into common trap of the available literatures, viz. to approach the 'genealogies' from an excessively presentist point of view. Instead, Dietze approaches the 1850s and 60s as a generative crucible for the conjunction of ideas and influences that need to be very carefully historicized as such if we're to have any chance of understanding the subsequent intellectual and political histories concerned. In its willingness to engage explicitly and at length with the literatures in political science as well as the writing theoretically about terrorism in general, Dietze's book has unusual strength for a historian. ""The book is impressively ""transnational"" in the terms that have become aspiringly normative for so many theoretically self-aware and ambitious historians during the past decade."" ""Dietze brilliantly makes these familiar and well-established histories and perceptions strange."" ""Another vital and original aspect of the study is its emphasis on media history and the particular characteristics of the mid 19th century public sphere -- BOTH in terms of the circulatory conditions needed for the transnational quality of the history she's trying to reconstruct AND for the key argument she's making about impact and reception. In other words, this is partly an argument about mechanics and the particular means of transmission and circulation. But it's also about the ontological grounds of political thought and political agency created out of this remarkable transnational circuitry."" -- Geoff Eley, Karl Pohrt Distinguished University Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Michigan This book may well revolutionize our understanding of the origins of terrorism in the 19th century. In highly original fashion, it closely links together the actions of terrorists in France, Russia, and the United States and shows how between 1858 and 1866 two key terrorists influenced three copycats who altogether ignited the explosion of modern terrorism. The depth of Dietze's research, drawing upon archives not only in Europe and the United States, but also in Russia, is staggering. A must read for anyone interested in the history of terrorism. -- Richard Bach Jensen, Louisiana Scholars’ College at Northwestern State University, author of <i>The Battle against Anarchist Terrorism</i> Author InformationCarola Dietze is Professor for Modern History (Chair) at Friedrich Schiller University Jena. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |