About the Book
This new text takes a new approach to telling the story of Western civilization as simply the history of mainly Europe from ancient times to present. This book examines the changing nature of the West—how the definition of the West has evolved and changed throughout history.
It examines how the definition of western civilization has changed through a series of cultural encounters with different cultures, beliefs, ideas, technologies, and peoples both outside of the West and within it.
Table of Contents:
“What is the West?”
Shifting Borders of the West.
Asking the Right Questions.
18. The Age of the French Revolution, 1789-1815.
The First French Revolution 1789-1791.
The French Republic, 1792-1799.
Cultural Change in France During the Revolution.
The Napoleonic Era, 1799-1815.
The Legacy of the French Revolution.
Conclusion: The French Revolution and the West.
Justice in History: The Trial of Louis XVI.
19. The West and the World: Empire, Trade and War in the Eighteenth Century.
European Empires in Americas and Asia.
Warfare in Europe, North America, and Asia.
The Atlantic World.
Encounters between Europeans and Asians.
The Crisis of Empire and the Atlantic Revolutions.
Conclusion: The Rise and Reshaping of the West.
Justice in History: The Court-Martial of the Mutineers on the Bounty.
The Human Body in History: Bathing in the East and West.
20. The Industrial Revolution, 1760-1850.
The Nature of the Industrial Revolution.
Conditions Favoring Industrial Growth.
The Spread of Industrialization.
The Effects of Industrialization.
Industry, Trade and Empire.
Conclusion: Industrialization and the West.
Justice in History: The Sadler Committee on Child Labor.
21. Ideological Conflicts and National Unification, 1815-1871.
New Ideologies in the Early Nineteenth Century.
Ideological Encounters in Europe, 1815-1848.
National Unification in Europe and America, 1848-1871.
Ideology, Empire, and the Balance of Power.
Conclusion: Ideological Transformation in the West.
Justice in History: Prostitution, Corporal Punishment, and Liberalism in Germany.
The Human Body in History: Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: The Body in Romantic Literature.
22. The Coming of Mass Politics: Industrialization, Emancipation, and Instability, 1870-1914.
Economic Transformation.
Defining the Political Nation.
Broadening the Political Nation.
Outside the Political Nation? The Experience of Women.
Conclusion: The West in an Age of Mass Politics.
Justice in History: The Dreyfus Affair—Defining National Identity in France.
The Human Body in History: Men in Black.
23. The West and the World: Cultural Crisis and New Imperialism, 1870-1914.
Scientific Transformations.
Cultural Crisis: The Fin de Siecle and the Birth of Modernism.
The New Imperialism.
Conclusion: Expansion and Fragmentation: Reshaping the West.
Justice in History: The Trial of Oscar Wilde.
Places of Encounters: The Soccer Stadium?
24. The First World War.
The Origins of the First World War.
The Experience of War.
War and Revolution.
Conclusion: The War and the West.
Justice in History: Revolutionary Justice—The Non-Trial of Nicholas and Alexandra.
The Human Body in History: Shellshock—From Woman's Malady to Soldier's Affliction.
25. Reconstruction, Reaction, and Continuing Revolution—The 1920s and 1930s.
Cultural Despair and Desire.
Out of the Trenches: Reconstructing National and Gender Politics in the 1920s.
The Rise of the Radical Right.
The Polarization of Politics in the 1930s.
European Empires in the Interwar Era.
Conclusion: The West? A Kingdom of Corpses.
Justice in History: The Trial of Adolf Hitler.
26. World War and Its Aftermath, 1931-1949.
The Coming of War.
Europe at War, 1939-1941.
The World at War, 1941-1945.
The Home Fronts.
A Dubious Peace, 1945-1949.
Conclusion: The New Europe, The New West.
Justice in History: Showtime: The Trial of Rudolf Slánsky.
The Human Body in History: The G.I,
27. The Holocaust, the Bomb, and the Legacy of Mass Killing.
Toward the Final Solution: From Emigration to Extermination.
Responding to the Holocaust.
The Race for the Atom Bomb.
The Dawn of the Nuclear Age.
Conclusion: The West, Progress, and Power.
Justice in History: The Trial of Adolf Eichmann.
28. Redefining the West After World War.
The Cold War, the West, and the World.
Imperial Encounters: Decolonization in a Cold War Context.
After Stalin: The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the 1950s and 1960s.
The West: Integration and Affluence.
Culture and Society in the Age of Consumption.
Conclusion: New Definitions, New Divisions.
Justice in History: “The Whole State Will Be On Trial”: The Aldo Moro Kidnapping.
29. The Contemporary Era, 1973 to the Present.
A New and Uncertain Era: The 1970s and 1980s.
Revolution in the East.
Rethinking the West.
Conclusion: Where Is the West Now?
Justice in History: The Sentencing of Salman Rushdie.
The Human Body in History: The Pill: Controlling the Female Body.
Glossary.
Index.
About the Author :
Brian Levack grew up in a family of teachers in the New York metropolitan area. From his father, a professor of French history, he acquired a love for studying the past, and he knew from an early age that he too would become a historian. He received his B.A. from Fordham University in 1965 and his Ph.D. from Yale in 1970. In graduate school he became fascinated by the history of the law and the interaction between law and politics, interests that he has maintained throughout his career. In 1969 he joined the History Department of the University of Texas at Austin, where he is now the John Green Regents Professor in History. The winner of several teaching awards, Levack teaches a wide variety of courses on British and European history, legal history, and the history of witchcraft. For eight years he served as the chair of his department, a rewarding but challenging assignment that made it difficult for him to devote as much time as he wished to his teaching and scholarship. His books include The Civil Lawyers in England, 1603-1641: A Political Study (1973), The Formation of the British State: England, Scotland and the Union, 1603-1707 (1987), and The Witch-Hunt in Early Modern Europe (1987 and 1995), which has been translated into eight languages.
His study of the development of beliefs about witchcraft in Europe over the course of many centuries gave him the idea of writing a textbook on Western civilization that would illustrate a broader set of encounters between different cultures, societies, and ideologies. While writing the book, Levack and his two sons built a house on property that he and his wife, Nancy, own in the Texas hill country. He found that the two projects presented similar challenges: it was easy to draw up the design, but far more difficult to execute it. When not teaching, writing, or doing carpentry work, Levack runs along the jogging trails of Austin, and he has recently discovered the pleasures of scuba diving.
Edward Muir grew up in the foothills of the Wasatch Mountains in Utah, close-by the Emigration Trail along which wagon trains of Mormon pioneers and California-bound settlers made their way westward. As a child he loved to explore the broken-down wagons and abandoned household goods left at the side of the trail and from that acquired a fascination with the past. Besides the material remains of the past, he grew up with stories of his Mormon pioneer ancestors and an appreciation for how the past continued to influence the present. During the turbulent 1960s, he became interested in Renaissance Italy as a period and a place that had been formative for Western civilization. His biggest challenge is finding the time to explore yet another new corner of Italy and its restaurants.
He received his Ph.D. from Rutgers University where he specialized in the Italian Renaissance and did archival research in Venice and Florence, Italy. He is now the Clarence L. Ver Steeg Professor in the Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University and former chair of the History Department. At Northwestern he has won several teaching awards. His books include, Civic Ritual in Renaissance Venice (Princeton, 1981); Mad Blood Stirring: Vendetta in Renaissance Italy (Johns Hopkins, 1993 and 1998); and Ritual in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge, 1997).
Some years ago Ed began to experiment with the use of historical trials in teaching and discovered that students loved them. From that experience he decided to write this textbook, which employs trials as a central feature. Ed lives beside Lake Michigan in Evanston, Illinois. His twin passions are skiing in the Rocky Mountains and rooting for the Chicago Cubs, who manage every summer to demonstrate that winning isn't everything.
Michael Maas was born in the Ohio River Valley, a community that had been a frontier outpost during the late eighteenth century. He grew up reading the stories of the early settlers and their struggles with the native peoples, and seeing in the urban fabric how the city had subsequently developed into a prosperous coal and steel town, with immigrants from all over the world. As a boy he developed a lifetime interest in the archaeology and history of the ancient Mediterranean world and began to study Latin. At Cornell University he combined his interests in cultural history and the Classical world by majoring in Classics and Anthropology. A semester in Rome clinched his commitment to these fields — and to Italian cooking. Michael went on to get his PhD in the Graduate Program in Ancient History and Mediterranean Archaeology at UC Berkeley.
He has traveled widely in the Mediterranean and the Middle East and participated in several archaeological excavations, including an underwater dig in Greece. Since 1985 he has taught ancient history at Rice University in Houston, Texas, where he founded and directs the interdisciplinary B.A. Program in Ancient Mediterranean Civilizations. He has won several teaching awards.
Maas' special area of research is Late Antiquity, the period of transition from the Classical to the Medieval worlds, which saw the collapse of the Roman Empire in western Europe and the development of the Byzantine state in the east. During his last sabbatical, he was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N. J., where he worked on his current book The Conqueror's Gift. Ethnography, Identity, and Imperial Power at the End of Antiquity (forthcoming). His other books include John Lydus and the Roman Past. Antiquarianism and Politics in the Age of Justinian (1992); Readings in Late Antiquity: A Sourcebook (2000); and Exegesis and Empire in the Early Byzantium (2003).
Maas has always been interested in interdisciplinary teaching and the encounters among different cultures. He sees The West: Encounters and Transformations as an opportunity to explain how the modern civilization that we call "the West" had its origins in the diverse interactions among many different peoples of antiquity.
Meredith Veldman grew up in the western suburbs of Chicago, in a close-knit, closed-in Dutch Calvinist community. In this immigrant society, history mattered: the "Reformed tradition" structured not only religious beliefs but also social identity and political practice. This influence certainly played some role in shaping Veldman's early fascination with history. But probably just as important were the countless World War II re-enactment games she played with her five older brothers. Whatever the cause, Veldman majored in history at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and then earned a Ph.D. in modern European history, with a concentration in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Britain, from Northwestern University in 1988.
As Associate Professor of History at Louisiana State University, Veldman teaches courses in nineteenth- and twentieth-century British history and twentieth-century Europe, as well as the second half of "Western Civ." In her many semesters in the Western Civ classroom, Veldman tried a number of different textbooks but found herself increasingly dissatisfied. She wanted a text that would convey to beginning students at least some of the complexities and ambiguities of historical interpretation, introduce them to the exciting work being done now in cultural history, and, most importantly, tell a good story. The search for this textbook led her to accept the offer made by Levack, Maas, and Muir to join them in writing The West: Encounters and Transformations.
The author of Fantasy, the Bomb, and the Greening of Britain: Romantic Protest, 1945-1980 (1984), Veldman is also the wife of a Methodist minister and the mother of two young sons. They reside in Baton Rouge, where Veldman finds coping with the steamy climate a constant challenge. She and her family recently returned from Manchester, England, where they lived for three years and astonished the natives by their enthusiastic appreciation of English weather.
Review :
"I enjoyed every page and could hardly put it down."
—Patricia Ali, Morris College
"I am impressed by the cultural encounters approach that this textbook uses. Showing the various forces of history [will] help students understand how everything in history meshes together into a giant story, instead of just being a jumble of facts."
—Leonard Curtis, Mississippi College
"The authors are absolutely right-on when they argue that the west is an idea shaped by cultural encounters...this is the only way that western civilization courses can be taught in the 21st century."
—Bryan Ganaway, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
"The author(s) have done an outstanding job of writing a text that is...lucid...and comprehensive."
—Sharon L. Arnoult, Midwestern State University
"Too many texts are afraid to be interesting, engaging or to tell a good story...this textbook provides comprehensive coverage of events and also tells some good stories, nice to see that this can be done in a textbook today. This is the kind of textbook that helps make a course interesting, helping professors who have trouble being lively and supporting those who try to engage students with good stories based in different methods, countries, and areas of interest."
—Patrick Holt, Fordham University
"The writing style is friendly, warm, and persuasive. Students will want to read these chapters and continue reading them."
—Theodore M. Kluz, Troy State University
"Finally, a textbook for Western civilization courses that uses modern, clear language without distorting the record of the past, that combines forceful interpretation with the 'facts' and that marries brevity to faithfulness to history! The 'encounters' theme is a most effective pedagogical method, and is in keeping with the approach of the West being a cultural construct. This is an innovative approach, appropriate for today's students living in our global world."
—Arthur H. Auten, University of Hartford