"Schulze′s book is clearly aimed at a wide readership and is likely to be used widely in undergraduate courses on European history."
History
"Schulze demonstrates a high level of competence in tracing the growth of the nation and the state from the time of Charlemagne to the reign of Napoleon. But it is in his account of that point in the early 19th century when the nation and state fuse that his book achieves brilliance." Choice
Preface.
Series Editor′s Preface.
Part I: States:.
1. The Advent of the Modern State.
2. Christianity and Reasons of State.
3. Leviathan.
4. The Constitutional State and the Rule of Law.
Part II: Nations:.
5. The ′Nation′ is not just any Nation.
6. Nation States and National Cultures.
7. The Pivotal Period.
8. The Invention of the ′Folk Nation′.
9. The Folk Nations in Reality.
Part III: Nation States:.
10. The Revolutionary Nation State (1815–1871).
11. The Imperial Nation State (1871–1914).
12. The Total Nation State (1914–1945).
Part IV: Nations, States and Europe:.
13. Nations, States and Europe.
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index of Names.
Hagen Schulze was born in Tangiers, Morocco in 1943. He was until recently Professor of Modern History and Head of Department at the Institute for History at the University of the German Armed Forces in Munich. He is currently Professor of Modern German and European History at the Free University in Berlin. He has written several books on the Weimar Republic, on Prussian history and on German and European nationalism (most recent English translation:
The Course of German Nationalism, From Frederick the Great to Bismarck, 1763–1867,1991) as well as numerous articles on German and European cultural and political history from the 18th to the 20th centuries.
This book describes the twin evolutions of nation and state from the Middle Ages to the present and links them to stages in European cultural history. The author contrasts the development of the state in different parts of Europe and shows how the concept merged with the idea of the nation in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The modern idea of the nation state, he argues, is rooted in the fundamental changes that took place during the industrial, political and cultural evolutions of this period.
Alongside the history of the nation the author charts successive stages in the development of nationalism, offering an explanation of why it was that in the decades preceding the twentieth century the concept of the nation began to take hold of the people at large. The identification of nation with state and the definition of its internal and external enemies laid the ground for the extreme developments of the twentieth century.
In the final part of the book the author traces the attempts in Western Europe since 1945 to come to terms with nationalism; and examines the implications of the rise of nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe. Peace in Europe is threatened, he suggests, not only by the resurgence of national interests in both East and West but also by the attempts to impose unity on the many unique ways of life that have evolved in the nations of Europe.