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This reader is appropriate as a main text or a supplementary text for introductory-level survey courses in Western Civilization and European History and Civilization. Aspects of Western Civilization challenges students with basic questions regarding historical development, human nature, moral action, and practical necessity. This collection of diverse primary sources explores a wide variety of issues and is organized around seven major themes: the Power Structure, Social and Spiritual Values, the Institution and the Individual, Imperialism, Revolution and Historical Transition, the Varieties of Truth, and Women in History.…mehr
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This reader is appropriate as a main text or a supplementary text for introductory-level survey courses in Western Civilization and European History and Civilization. Aspects of Western Civilization challenges students with basic questions regarding historical development, human nature, moral action, and practical necessity. This collection of diverse primary sources explores a wide variety of issues and is organized around seven major themes: the Power Structure, Social and Spiritual Values, the Institution and the Individual, Imperialism, Revolution and Historical Transition, the Varieties of Truth, and Women in History.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Pearson Education (US)
- 7 ed
- Seitenzahl: 480
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. März 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 189mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 902g
- ISBN-13: 9780205708321
- ISBN-10: 0205708323
- Artikelnr.: 28175098
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Pearson Education (US)
- 7 ed
- Seitenzahl: 480
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. März 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 189mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 902g
- ISBN-13: 9780205708321
- ISBN-10: 0205708323
- Artikelnr.: 28175098
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Perry M. Rogers received his B.A. from San Jose State University, his M.A. from the University of California, Los Angeles, and his Ph.D. from the University of Washington where he specialized in ancient history with fields in medieval history, and Early Modern Europe. He has been a professor of Roman history at the Ohio State University and has held an adjunct position in the Liberal Arts at the Pontifical College Josephinum for several years. He remains Chair of the History Department at Columbus School for Girls, an independent, college preparatory school in Columbus, Ohio. Rogers’s two-volume publications for Pearson/Prentice Hall include Aspects of Western Civilization (7th edition), Aspects of World History, and The Human Spirit: Sources in the Western Humanities.
PREFACEPART I: FOUNDATIONS OF THE MODERN WORLD Chapter 1: The Age of the
Renaissance and Reformation SECTION I: THE RENAISSANCE MOVEMENT The
Humanist Movement Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486), Pico della
Mirandola The Soul of Man (1474), Marcilio Ficino The Political Life of
Florence The Rule of Cosimo de'Medici, Vespasiano The Prince: Everyone Sees
What You Appear to Be, Few Perceive What You Are Niccolò Machiavelli
SECTION II: THE REFORMATION ERA The Lutheran Reformation How Many Sins Are
Committed in a Single Day? (1517), Johann Tetzel Salvation Through Faith
Alone, Martin Luther The Ninety-five Theses (1517), Martin Luther Here I
Stand: Address at the Diet of Worms (1521), Martin Luther The Edict of
Worms (1521), Emperor Charles V In the Wake of LutherJohn Calvin and the
Genevan Reformation On the Necessity of Reforming the Church (1544), John
Calvin Predestination: Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), John
Calvin The Catholic Reformation Spiritual Exercises (1548), Ignatius Loyola
The Council of Trent: Profession of Faith The Tridentine Index of Books
(1564) Chapter 2: I Am the State: The Development of Absolutism in England
and France The English Revolution (1649-1689) The Struggle for
Constitutional Government (1650-1660) The Mortal God: Leviathan (1651),
Thomas Hobbes The Instrument of Government (December 16, 1653) Cromwell
Denies the Crown (May 8, 1657), Oliver Cromwell The Reflection in the
Mirror: Oliver Cromwell: The Lord Protector To You Our Country Owes Its
Liberties John Milton Guilty of Crimes for which Hell-Fire Is Prepared,
Edward Hyde The Restoration and the Glorious Revolution (1660-1689) A Force
Sufficient to Defend Us from the Violence of Those Evil Counsellors,
William of Orange The Bill of Rights (1689) The Absolutism of Louis XIV
The Theory of Divine-Right Monarchy The Ideal Absolute State (1697), Jean
Domat Politics and Scripture (1679), Jacques Benigne Bossuet
The Sun King and the Practice of Absolute Rule Vanity Was His Ruin, The
Duke of Saint-Simon Letters to His Heirs: Allow Good Sense to Act, King
Louis XIV A Frightful Plot: The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, The Duke
of Saint-Simon The Artistic Vision: The Palace of Versailles A Celebration
of Greatness, Jean Colbert Visible Majesty, King Louis XIV Chapter 3: Dare
to Know!: The Scientific Revolution Science and the Church The Heliocentric
Statement (ca. 1520), Nicolaus Copernicus On the Movement of the Earth
(1543), Nicolaus Copernicus Science and the Bible: They Would Have Us
Abandon Reason (1615), Galileo Galilei The Reflection in the Mirror:
Galileo Absolved: The Resolution Science and Faith Are Both Gifts from God
(1993) Pope John Paul II The Foundations of Modern Science The Advancement
of Learning (1605), Sir Francis Bacon I Think, Therefore I Am: Discourse on
Method (1637), René Eescartes Against the Grain: On the Circulation of the
Blood (1628) A Motion, As It Were, In a Circle William Harvey Principles of
AnalysisInduction and God: Optics (1704) Sir Isaac Newton
Chapter 4: The Enlightenment and the Revolution of the Mind
Thoughts on the Human Condition and Human Progress
The Blank Slate of the Mind: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
(1690) John Locke
Against the Grain: On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
The Greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number, Cesare Beccaria
Thoughts on Religion
GodA Cause Contradicted by Its Effects: Common Sense (1770), Baron
d'Holbach
On Universal Toleration, Voltaire
If God Did Not Exist, He Would Have to Be Invented, Voltaire
Thoughts on Education
Introduction to the Encyclopedia (1751), Jean Le Rond d'Alembert
We Did Not Live Entirely in Vain (1764), Denis Diderot
Thoughts on Government: The Political Framework
Second Treatise of Civil Government (1690), John Locke
The Spirit of the Laws (1748), Baron de montesquieu
The Social Contract (1762), Jean Jacques Rousseau
The Declaration of Independence (1776), Thomas Jefferson
Thoughts on Women: The Social Framework
Woman: Especially Constituted to Please Man, Jean Jacques Rousseau
A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), Mary Wollstonecraft
Thoughts on Commerce: The Economic Framework
The Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith
PART II : THE ERA OF REVOLUTION
Chapter 5: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity!: The French Revolution
Conditions of Society on the Eve of Revolution
The Corruption of the French Court, Marquis d'Argenson
Ancient Oaks Mutilated by Time , Marquis de Bouille
The Grievances of Carcassonne
Beggars, Rags, and Misery, Arthur Young
The Outbreak of Revolution (17891791)
What Is the Third Estate? (January 1789), the Abbé Aieyès
Women of the Third Estate: We Ask to Be Enlightened (January 1789)
The Tennis Court Oath (June 29, 1789)
The Fall of the Bastille (July 14, 1789)
Declaration of the Rights of Man (August 27, 1789)
Against the Grain: The Flip Side of Liberty
Declaration of the Rights of Woman (1791), Olympe de Gouges
Reflections on the Revolution (1790), Edmund Burke
The Radicalization of the Revolution (17921794)
The Fall of Louis XVI (1792-1793)
The Execution of Louis XVI (January 21, 1793), Henry Edgeworth de Firmont
Proclamation of the Convention to the French People (January 23, 1793)
Reflections on Louis XVI, Mme Roland
The Reflection in the Mirror: A Revolutionary Reality Check
An Update on the Political Rights of Women (1793)
The Reign of Terror (1793-1794)
You Would Exterminate All Your Enemies by the Guillotine! (December 20,
1793), Camille Desmoulins
The Artistic Vision: Jean-Claude Marat: The Martyr of the Revolution
The Death of Marat (1793), Jacques-Louis David
Virtue and Terror: Speech to the Convention (February 5, 1794), Maximilien
Robespierre
The Administration of Terror (June 10, 1794)
The Execution of Robespierre (July 28, 1794), Durand de Maillane
Chapter 6: Paths of Glory: Napoleon and the Romantic Movement
The Napoleonic Era (1796-1815)
The Will to Power (1796-1802)
On the Realities of Power (1796), Napoleon Bonaparte
Suppression of the Newspapers (1800)
Articles for the Catholic Church (1802)
The Imperial Mantle (1804-1806)
The Only Salvation Lies in Hereditary Power (December 1804), Napoleon
Bonaparte
Why the French Submitted to Napoleon's Rule (1804), Comtesse de Rémusat
The Imperial Catechism (April 1806)
Exile and Death: The Hero in History
Napoleon in Exile: We Stand as Martyrs to an Immortal Cause!, Napoleon
Bonaparte
The Role of Great Men in History, G. W. F. Hegel
Against the Grain: Beethoven's Eroica: To the Memory of a Great Man
Portrait of Beethoven, Joseph Karl Stieler Ode to Joy, Friedrich Schiller
The Romantic Movement (1780-1830) The Erlking, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Terror and the Macabre: Frankenstein (1818), Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The Artistic Vision: The Tyrant of Europe Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte, Lord
Byron The Third of May, 1808 , Francisco Goya Chapter 7: A World to Win!:
The Industrial Revolution Rural and Urban Transformations The Dependent
Poor (1795), David Davies How Are Men to Provide for Their Families?: A
Workers Petition (1786) The Urban Landscape The Factory System Sybil
(1845), Benjamin Disraeli The Sadler Report: Not Many as Deformed as I Am
(1832) Child Labor A Defense of the Factory System (1835), Andrew Ure
Living Conditions The Condition of the Working Class in England (1844),
Friedrich Engels The Impact of the Factory System on Women and the Family,
Friedrich Engels
Reaction and Reform Against the Grain: The Horrors of the Slave Trade A
Scene of Horror Almost Inconceivable , Olauda Eqiano We Can No Longer Plead
Ignorance, William Wilberforce Law and Liberty: The Liberal Truth The Iron
Law of Wages (1817), David Ricardo The Chartist Demands (1838) A
Middle-Class Perspective (1859), Samuel Smiles The Artistic Vision: The
Social Perspective by Train Over London by Rail , Gustave Doré Third Class
Carriage , Honoré Daumier Visions of a New World: The Socialist Truth
Utopian Socialism (1816), Robert Owen The Communist Manifesto (1848), Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels The Reflection in the Mirror: A Papal
Perspective: Rerum Novarum (1891) A Yoke Little Better Than That of Slavery
Itself , Pope Leo XIII Chapter 8: Fatherland: The Power of Nationalism
Volksgeist : The Spirit of the People(1815-1850) The Conservative
Confession of Faith, Prince Klemens von Metternich Stirrings: The People
and the Fatherland, Johann Gottlieb Fichte The Duties of Man, Giuseppi
Mazzini The Reflection in the Mirror: The Greek Revolution of 1820 To
Avenge Ourselves Against a Frightful Tyranny Greece on the Ruins of
Missolonghi (1826), Eugène Delacroix A Moderate Amount of Happiness for All
Men, Alexis de Tocqueville 1848: A Great Outburst of Elemental Forces Had
Begun, Carl Schurz
The Political Unification of Italy and Germany (1850-1890) Proclamation for
the Liberation of Sicily (1860), Giuseppe Garibaldi Address to the Italian
Parliament (1871), King Victor Emmanuel II We Germans Fear God, and Nothing
Else in the World: Speech to the Reichstag (1888), Otto von Bismarck
Against the Grain: The Zionist Movement The Basil Program (1897) Chapter 9:
Mark Them with Your Dead!: The Scramble for Global Empire Send Forth the
Best Ye Breed!: The Foundations of Imperialism Racism and the Corruption of
Science The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin The Standpoint of Science
(1900), Karl Pearson For God and Country The Mandate System: Britain's Duty
in Egypt (1890) , Joseph Chamberlain France Must Be a Great Country!
(1883), Jules Ferry Germany's Place in the Sun (1900), Kaiser Wilhelm II
The White Man's Burden (1899), Rudyard Kipling To Seek Another's Profit and
Work Another's Gain Your New-Caught Sullen Peoples Education in India: The
Intrinsic Superiority of Western Literature (1835), Thomas Babington
Macaulay Foreign Children, Robert Louis Stevenson A Natural Inclination to
Submit to a Higher Authority (1893) Sir Frederick Dealtry Lugard
The Reflection in the Mirror The Judgment of Your Peers The White Man's
Face: Terror in the Congo, Frederick Starr The Battle Hymn of the Republic
(Brought Down to Date), Mark Twain Chapter 10: Fin de Siècle: The Birth of
the Modern Era The Woman Question and Anti-Feminism Seneca Falls
Declaration (1848) Sisters of America! Your Sisters of France Are United
with You (1851) Pauline Roland and Jeanne Deroine Against Woman Suffrage
(1884), Francis Parkman The Brain Weight of Women is Five Ounces Less Than
That of Men (1887), George Romanes Against the Grain: The Independent Woman
A Doll's House (1879), Henrik Ibsen This Is the Logic of Demons!, Josephine
Butler I Incite This Meeting to Rebellion (1912), Emmeline Pankhurst The
Revolt Against Reason Faith, Love, and Hope: Enough! Enough! (1887),
Friedrich Nietzsche God Is Dead!, Friedrich Nietzsche The Artistic Vision:
The Insular World of Edvard Munch Scream (1893), Edvard Munch
PART III: THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND BEYOND Chapter 11: The Great War
(1914-1918) The Road to War The Celebration of War Without War, No State
Could Exist, Heinrich von Treitschke Blind Obedience to Primitive Instincts
(1910), Norman Angell The Lamps Go Out Over Europe Statutes of The Black
Hand Assassination at Sarajevo: The Plot and Murder (June 28, 1914) The
Sword is Drawn! (August 18, 1914), Kaiser Wilhelm II They Shall Not Pass:
The Great War (1914-1918) The Horror of Battle The Battle of Verdun
(FebruaryDecember 1916) The Battle of the Somme (JulyNovember 1916) No
Man's Land, J. Knight-Adkin What Are You Fighting For, Michel? Against the
Grain: Glory in the Skies: The Red Baron An Englishman for Breakfast Baron
Manfred von Richthofen On the Other Side of the Boundary Ernst Udet It Is
Sweet and Proper to Die for One's Country Five Souls W. N. Ewer A German
War Letter: One Blood-Soaked, Corpse-Strewn Field Richard Schiemder
Renaissance and Reformation SECTION I: THE RENAISSANCE MOVEMENT The
Humanist Movement Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486), Pico della
Mirandola The Soul of Man (1474), Marcilio Ficino The Political Life of
Florence The Rule of Cosimo de'Medici, Vespasiano The Prince: Everyone Sees
What You Appear to Be, Few Perceive What You Are Niccolò Machiavelli
SECTION II: THE REFORMATION ERA The Lutheran Reformation How Many Sins Are
Committed in a Single Day? (1517), Johann Tetzel Salvation Through Faith
Alone, Martin Luther The Ninety-five Theses (1517), Martin Luther Here I
Stand: Address at the Diet of Worms (1521), Martin Luther The Edict of
Worms (1521), Emperor Charles V In the Wake of LutherJohn Calvin and the
Genevan Reformation On the Necessity of Reforming the Church (1544), John
Calvin Predestination: Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), John
Calvin The Catholic Reformation Spiritual Exercises (1548), Ignatius Loyola
The Council of Trent: Profession of Faith The Tridentine Index of Books
(1564) Chapter 2: I Am the State: The Development of Absolutism in England
and France The English Revolution (1649-1689) The Struggle for
Constitutional Government (1650-1660) The Mortal God: Leviathan (1651),
Thomas Hobbes The Instrument of Government (December 16, 1653) Cromwell
Denies the Crown (May 8, 1657), Oliver Cromwell The Reflection in the
Mirror: Oliver Cromwell: The Lord Protector To You Our Country Owes Its
Liberties John Milton Guilty of Crimes for which Hell-Fire Is Prepared,
Edward Hyde The Restoration and the Glorious Revolution (1660-1689) A Force
Sufficient to Defend Us from the Violence of Those Evil Counsellors,
William of Orange The Bill of Rights (1689) The Absolutism of Louis XIV
The Theory of Divine-Right Monarchy The Ideal Absolute State (1697), Jean
Domat Politics and Scripture (1679), Jacques Benigne Bossuet
The Sun King and the Practice of Absolute Rule Vanity Was His Ruin, The
Duke of Saint-Simon Letters to His Heirs: Allow Good Sense to Act, King
Louis XIV A Frightful Plot: The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, The Duke
of Saint-Simon The Artistic Vision: The Palace of Versailles A Celebration
of Greatness, Jean Colbert Visible Majesty, King Louis XIV Chapter 3: Dare
to Know!: The Scientific Revolution Science and the Church The Heliocentric
Statement (ca. 1520), Nicolaus Copernicus On the Movement of the Earth
(1543), Nicolaus Copernicus Science and the Bible: They Would Have Us
Abandon Reason (1615), Galileo Galilei The Reflection in the Mirror:
Galileo Absolved: The Resolution Science and Faith Are Both Gifts from God
(1993) Pope John Paul II The Foundations of Modern Science The Advancement
of Learning (1605), Sir Francis Bacon I Think, Therefore I Am: Discourse on
Method (1637), René Eescartes Against the Grain: On the Circulation of the
Blood (1628) A Motion, As It Were, In a Circle William Harvey Principles of
AnalysisInduction and God: Optics (1704) Sir Isaac Newton
Chapter 4: The Enlightenment and the Revolution of the Mind
Thoughts on the Human Condition and Human Progress
The Blank Slate of the Mind: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
(1690) John Locke
Against the Grain: On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
The Greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number, Cesare Beccaria
Thoughts on Religion
GodA Cause Contradicted by Its Effects: Common Sense (1770), Baron
d'Holbach
On Universal Toleration, Voltaire
If God Did Not Exist, He Would Have to Be Invented, Voltaire
Thoughts on Education
Introduction to the Encyclopedia (1751), Jean Le Rond d'Alembert
We Did Not Live Entirely in Vain (1764), Denis Diderot
Thoughts on Government: The Political Framework
Second Treatise of Civil Government (1690), John Locke
The Spirit of the Laws (1748), Baron de montesquieu
The Social Contract (1762), Jean Jacques Rousseau
The Declaration of Independence (1776), Thomas Jefferson
Thoughts on Women: The Social Framework
Woman: Especially Constituted to Please Man, Jean Jacques Rousseau
A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), Mary Wollstonecraft
Thoughts on Commerce: The Economic Framework
The Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith
PART II : THE ERA OF REVOLUTION
Chapter 5: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity!: The French Revolution
Conditions of Society on the Eve of Revolution
The Corruption of the French Court, Marquis d'Argenson
Ancient Oaks Mutilated by Time , Marquis de Bouille
The Grievances of Carcassonne
Beggars, Rags, and Misery, Arthur Young
The Outbreak of Revolution (17891791)
What Is the Third Estate? (January 1789), the Abbé Aieyès
Women of the Third Estate: We Ask to Be Enlightened (January 1789)
The Tennis Court Oath (June 29, 1789)
The Fall of the Bastille (July 14, 1789)
Declaration of the Rights of Man (August 27, 1789)
Against the Grain: The Flip Side of Liberty
Declaration of the Rights of Woman (1791), Olympe de Gouges
Reflections on the Revolution (1790), Edmund Burke
The Radicalization of the Revolution (17921794)
The Fall of Louis XVI (1792-1793)
The Execution of Louis XVI (January 21, 1793), Henry Edgeworth de Firmont
Proclamation of the Convention to the French People (January 23, 1793)
Reflections on Louis XVI, Mme Roland
The Reflection in the Mirror: A Revolutionary Reality Check
An Update on the Political Rights of Women (1793)
The Reign of Terror (1793-1794)
You Would Exterminate All Your Enemies by the Guillotine! (December 20,
1793), Camille Desmoulins
The Artistic Vision: Jean-Claude Marat: The Martyr of the Revolution
The Death of Marat (1793), Jacques-Louis David
Virtue and Terror: Speech to the Convention (February 5, 1794), Maximilien
Robespierre
The Administration of Terror (June 10, 1794)
The Execution of Robespierre (July 28, 1794), Durand de Maillane
Chapter 6: Paths of Glory: Napoleon and the Romantic Movement
The Napoleonic Era (1796-1815)
The Will to Power (1796-1802)
On the Realities of Power (1796), Napoleon Bonaparte
Suppression of the Newspapers (1800)
Articles for the Catholic Church (1802)
The Imperial Mantle (1804-1806)
The Only Salvation Lies in Hereditary Power (December 1804), Napoleon
Bonaparte
Why the French Submitted to Napoleon's Rule (1804), Comtesse de Rémusat
The Imperial Catechism (April 1806)
Exile and Death: The Hero in History
Napoleon in Exile: We Stand as Martyrs to an Immortal Cause!, Napoleon
Bonaparte
The Role of Great Men in History, G. W. F. Hegel
Against the Grain: Beethoven's Eroica: To the Memory of a Great Man
Portrait of Beethoven, Joseph Karl Stieler Ode to Joy, Friedrich Schiller
The Romantic Movement (1780-1830) The Erlking, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Terror and the Macabre: Frankenstein (1818), Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The Artistic Vision: The Tyrant of Europe Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte, Lord
Byron The Third of May, 1808 , Francisco Goya Chapter 7: A World to Win!:
The Industrial Revolution Rural and Urban Transformations The Dependent
Poor (1795), David Davies How Are Men to Provide for Their Families?: A
Workers Petition (1786) The Urban Landscape The Factory System Sybil
(1845), Benjamin Disraeli The Sadler Report: Not Many as Deformed as I Am
(1832) Child Labor A Defense of the Factory System (1835), Andrew Ure
Living Conditions The Condition of the Working Class in England (1844),
Friedrich Engels The Impact of the Factory System on Women and the Family,
Friedrich Engels
Reaction and Reform Against the Grain: The Horrors of the Slave Trade A
Scene of Horror Almost Inconceivable , Olauda Eqiano We Can No Longer Plead
Ignorance, William Wilberforce Law and Liberty: The Liberal Truth The Iron
Law of Wages (1817), David Ricardo The Chartist Demands (1838) A
Middle-Class Perspective (1859), Samuel Smiles The Artistic Vision: The
Social Perspective by Train Over London by Rail , Gustave Doré Third Class
Carriage , Honoré Daumier Visions of a New World: The Socialist Truth
Utopian Socialism (1816), Robert Owen The Communist Manifesto (1848), Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels The Reflection in the Mirror: A Papal
Perspective: Rerum Novarum (1891) A Yoke Little Better Than That of Slavery
Itself , Pope Leo XIII Chapter 8: Fatherland: The Power of Nationalism
Volksgeist : The Spirit of the People(1815-1850) The Conservative
Confession of Faith, Prince Klemens von Metternich Stirrings: The People
and the Fatherland, Johann Gottlieb Fichte The Duties of Man, Giuseppi
Mazzini The Reflection in the Mirror: The Greek Revolution of 1820 To
Avenge Ourselves Against a Frightful Tyranny Greece on the Ruins of
Missolonghi (1826), Eugène Delacroix A Moderate Amount of Happiness for All
Men, Alexis de Tocqueville 1848: A Great Outburst of Elemental Forces Had
Begun, Carl Schurz
The Political Unification of Italy and Germany (1850-1890) Proclamation for
the Liberation of Sicily (1860), Giuseppe Garibaldi Address to the Italian
Parliament (1871), King Victor Emmanuel II We Germans Fear God, and Nothing
Else in the World: Speech to the Reichstag (1888), Otto von Bismarck
Against the Grain: The Zionist Movement The Basil Program (1897) Chapter 9:
Mark Them with Your Dead!: The Scramble for Global Empire Send Forth the
Best Ye Breed!: The Foundations of Imperialism Racism and the Corruption of
Science The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin The Standpoint of Science
(1900), Karl Pearson For God and Country The Mandate System: Britain's Duty
in Egypt (1890) , Joseph Chamberlain France Must Be a Great Country!
(1883), Jules Ferry Germany's Place in the Sun (1900), Kaiser Wilhelm II
The White Man's Burden (1899), Rudyard Kipling To Seek Another's Profit and
Work Another's Gain Your New-Caught Sullen Peoples Education in India: The
Intrinsic Superiority of Western Literature (1835), Thomas Babington
Macaulay Foreign Children, Robert Louis Stevenson A Natural Inclination to
Submit to a Higher Authority (1893) Sir Frederick Dealtry Lugard
The Reflection in the Mirror The Judgment of Your Peers The White Man's
Face: Terror in the Congo, Frederick Starr The Battle Hymn of the Republic
(Brought Down to Date), Mark Twain Chapter 10: Fin de Siècle: The Birth of
the Modern Era The Woman Question and Anti-Feminism Seneca Falls
Declaration (1848) Sisters of America! Your Sisters of France Are United
with You (1851) Pauline Roland and Jeanne Deroine Against Woman Suffrage
(1884), Francis Parkman The Brain Weight of Women is Five Ounces Less Than
That of Men (1887), George Romanes Against the Grain: The Independent Woman
A Doll's House (1879), Henrik Ibsen This Is the Logic of Demons!, Josephine
Butler I Incite This Meeting to Rebellion (1912), Emmeline Pankhurst The
Revolt Against Reason Faith, Love, and Hope: Enough! Enough! (1887),
Friedrich Nietzsche God Is Dead!, Friedrich Nietzsche The Artistic Vision:
The Insular World of Edvard Munch Scream (1893), Edvard Munch
PART III: THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND BEYOND Chapter 11: The Great War
(1914-1918) The Road to War The Celebration of War Without War, No State
Could Exist, Heinrich von Treitschke Blind Obedience to Primitive Instincts
(1910), Norman Angell The Lamps Go Out Over Europe Statutes of The Black
Hand Assassination at Sarajevo: The Plot and Murder (June 28, 1914) The
Sword is Drawn! (August 18, 1914), Kaiser Wilhelm II They Shall Not Pass:
The Great War (1914-1918) The Horror of Battle The Battle of Verdun
(FebruaryDecember 1916) The Battle of the Somme (JulyNovember 1916) No
Man's Land, J. Knight-Adkin What Are You Fighting For, Michel? Against the
Grain: Glory in the Skies: The Red Baron An Englishman for Breakfast Baron
Manfred von Richthofen On the Other Side of the Boundary Ernst Udet It Is
Sweet and Proper to Die for One's Country Five Souls W. N. Ewer A German
War Letter: One Blood-Soaked, Corpse-Strewn Field Richard Schiemder
PREFACEPART I: FOUNDATIONS OF THE MODERN WORLD Chapter 1: The Age of the
Renaissance and Reformation SECTION I: THE RENAISSANCE MOVEMENT The
Humanist Movement Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486), Pico della
Mirandola The Soul of Man (1474), Marcilio Ficino The Political Life of
Florence The Rule of Cosimo de'Medici, Vespasiano The Prince: Everyone Sees
What You Appear to Be, Few Perceive What You Are Niccolò Machiavelli
SECTION II: THE REFORMATION ERA The Lutheran Reformation How Many Sins Are
Committed in a Single Day? (1517), Johann Tetzel Salvation Through Faith
Alone, Martin Luther The Ninety-five Theses (1517), Martin Luther Here I
Stand: Address at the Diet of Worms (1521), Martin Luther The Edict of
Worms (1521), Emperor Charles V In the Wake of LutherJohn Calvin and the
Genevan Reformation On the Necessity of Reforming the Church (1544), John
Calvin Predestination: Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), John
Calvin The Catholic Reformation Spiritual Exercises (1548), Ignatius Loyola
The Council of Trent: Profession of Faith The Tridentine Index of Books
(1564) Chapter 2: I Am the State: The Development of Absolutism in England
and France The English Revolution (1649-1689) The Struggle for
Constitutional Government (1650-1660) The Mortal God: Leviathan (1651),
Thomas Hobbes The Instrument of Government (December 16, 1653) Cromwell
Denies the Crown (May 8, 1657), Oliver Cromwell The Reflection in the
Mirror: Oliver Cromwell: The Lord Protector To You Our Country Owes Its
Liberties John Milton Guilty of Crimes for which Hell-Fire Is Prepared,
Edward Hyde The Restoration and the Glorious Revolution (1660-1689) A Force
Sufficient to Defend Us from the Violence of Those Evil Counsellors,
William of Orange The Bill of Rights (1689) The Absolutism of Louis XIV
The Theory of Divine-Right Monarchy The Ideal Absolute State (1697), Jean
Domat Politics and Scripture (1679), Jacques Benigne Bossuet
The Sun King and the Practice of Absolute Rule Vanity Was His Ruin, The
Duke of Saint-Simon Letters to His Heirs: Allow Good Sense to Act, King
Louis XIV A Frightful Plot: The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, The Duke
of Saint-Simon The Artistic Vision: The Palace of Versailles A Celebration
of Greatness, Jean Colbert Visible Majesty, King Louis XIV Chapter 3: Dare
to Know!: The Scientific Revolution Science and the Church The Heliocentric
Statement (ca. 1520), Nicolaus Copernicus On the Movement of the Earth
(1543), Nicolaus Copernicus Science and the Bible: They Would Have Us
Abandon Reason (1615), Galileo Galilei The Reflection in the Mirror:
Galileo Absolved: The Resolution Science and Faith Are Both Gifts from God
(1993) Pope John Paul II The Foundations of Modern Science The Advancement
of Learning (1605), Sir Francis Bacon I Think, Therefore I Am: Discourse on
Method (1637), René Eescartes Against the Grain: On the Circulation of the
Blood (1628) A Motion, As It Were, In a Circle William Harvey Principles of
AnalysisInduction and God: Optics (1704) Sir Isaac Newton
Chapter 4: The Enlightenment and the Revolution of the Mind
Thoughts on the Human Condition and Human Progress
The Blank Slate of the Mind: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
(1690) John Locke
Against the Grain: On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
The Greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number, Cesare Beccaria
Thoughts on Religion
GodA Cause Contradicted by Its Effects: Common Sense (1770), Baron
d'Holbach
On Universal Toleration, Voltaire
If God Did Not Exist, He Would Have to Be Invented, Voltaire
Thoughts on Education
Introduction to the Encyclopedia (1751), Jean Le Rond d'Alembert
We Did Not Live Entirely in Vain (1764), Denis Diderot
Thoughts on Government: The Political Framework
Second Treatise of Civil Government (1690), John Locke
The Spirit of the Laws (1748), Baron de montesquieu
The Social Contract (1762), Jean Jacques Rousseau
The Declaration of Independence (1776), Thomas Jefferson
Thoughts on Women: The Social Framework
Woman: Especially Constituted to Please Man, Jean Jacques Rousseau
A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), Mary Wollstonecraft
Thoughts on Commerce: The Economic Framework
The Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith
PART II : THE ERA OF REVOLUTION
Chapter 5: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity!: The French Revolution
Conditions of Society on the Eve of Revolution
The Corruption of the French Court, Marquis d'Argenson
Ancient Oaks Mutilated by Time , Marquis de Bouille
The Grievances of Carcassonne
Beggars, Rags, and Misery, Arthur Young
The Outbreak of Revolution (17891791)
What Is the Third Estate? (January 1789), the Abbé Aieyès
Women of the Third Estate: We Ask to Be Enlightened (January 1789)
The Tennis Court Oath (June 29, 1789)
The Fall of the Bastille (July 14, 1789)
Declaration of the Rights of Man (August 27, 1789)
Against the Grain: The Flip Side of Liberty
Declaration of the Rights of Woman (1791), Olympe de Gouges
Reflections on the Revolution (1790), Edmund Burke
The Radicalization of the Revolution (17921794)
The Fall of Louis XVI (1792-1793)
The Execution of Louis XVI (January 21, 1793), Henry Edgeworth de Firmont
Proclamation of the Convention to the French People (January 23, 1793)
Reflections on Louis XVI, Mme Roland
The Reflection in the Mirror: A Revolutionary Reality Check
An Update on the Political Rights of Women (1793)
The Reign of Terror (1793-1794)
You Would Exterminate All Your Enemies by the Guillotine! (December 20,
1793), Camille Desmoulins
The Artistic Vision: Jean-Claude Marat: The Martyr of the Revolution
The Death of Marat (1793), Jacques-Louis David
Virtue and Terror: Speech to the Convention (February 5, 1794), Maximilien
Robespierre
The Administration of Terror (June 10, 1794)
The Execution of Robespierre (July 28, 1794), Durand de Maillane
Chapter 6: Paths of Glory: Napoleon and the Romantic Movement
The Napoleonic Era (1796-1815)
The Will to Power (1796-1802)
On the Realities of Power (1796), Napoleon Bonaparte
Suppression of the Newspapers (1800)
Articles for the Catholic Church (1802)
The Imperial Mantle (1804-1806)
The Only Salvation Lies in Hereditary Power (December 1804), Napoleon
Bonaparte
Why the French Submitted to Napoleon's Rule (1804), Comtesse de Rémusat
The Imperial Catechism (April 1806)
Exile and Death: The Hero in History
Napoleon in Exile: We Stand as Martyrs to an Immortal Cause!, Napoleon
Bonaparte
The Role of Great Men in History, G. W. F. Hegel
Against the Grain: Beethoven's Eroica: To the Memory of a Great Man
Portrait of Beethoven, Joseph Karl Stieler Ode to Joy, Friedrich Schiller
The Romantic Movement (1780-1830) The Erlking, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Terror and the Macabre: Frankenstein (1818), Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The Artistic Vision: The Tyrant of Europe Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte, Lord
Byron The Third of May, 1808 , Francisco Goya Chapter 7: A World to Win!:
The Industrial Revolution Rural and Urban Transformations The Dependent
Poor (1795), David Davies How Are Men to Provide for Their Families?: A
Workers Petition (1786) The Urban Landscape The Factory System Sybil
(1845), Benjamin Disraeli The Sadler Report: Not Many as Deformed as I Am
(1832) Child Labor A Defense of the Factory System (1835), Andrew Ure
Living Conditions The Condition of the Working Class in England (1844),
Friedrich Engels The Impact of the Factory System on Women and the Family,
Friedrich Engels
Reaction and Reform Against the Grain: The Horrors of the Slave Trade A
Scene of Horror Almost Inconceivable , Olauda Eqiano We Can No Longer Plead
Ignorance, William Wilberforce Law and Liberty: The Liberal Truth The Iron
Law of Wages (1817), David Ricardo The Chartist Demands (1838) A
Middle-Class Perspective (1859), Samuel Smiles The Artistic Vision: The
Social Perspective by Train Over London by Rail , Gustave Doré Third Class
Carriage , Honoré Daumier Visions of a New World: The Socialist Truth
Utopian Socialism (1816), Robert Owen The Communist Manifesto (1848), Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels The Reflection in the Mirror: A Papal
Perspective: Rerum Novarum (1891) A Yoke Little Better Than That of Slavery
Itself , Pope Leo XIII Chapter 8: Fatherland: The Power of Nationalism
Volksgeist : The Spirit of the People(1815-1850) The Conservative
Confession of Faith, Prince Klemens von Metternich Stirrings: The People
and the Fatherland, Johann Gottlieb Fichte The Duties of Man, Giuseppi
Mazzini The Reflection in the Mirror: The Greek Revolution of 1820 To
Avenge Ourselves Against a Frightful Tyranny Greece on the Ruins of
Missolonghi (1826), Eugène Delacroix A Moderate Amount of Happiness for All
Men, Alexis de Tocqueville 1848: A Great Outburst of Elemental Forces Had
Begun, Carl Schurz
The Political Unification of Italy and Germany (1850-1890) Proclamation for
the Liberation of Sicily (1860), Giuseppe Garibaldi Address to the Italian
Parliament (1871), King Victor Emmanuel II We Germans Fear God, and Nothing
Else in the World: Speech to the Reichstag (1888), Otto von Bismarck
Against the Grain: The Zionist Movement The Basil Program (1897) Chapter 9:
Mark Them with Your Dead!: The Scramble for Global Empire Send Forth the
Best Ye Breed!: The Foundations of Imperialism Racism and the Corruption of
Science The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin The Standpoint of Science
(1900), Karl Pearson For God and Country The Mandate System: Britain's Duty
in Egypt (1890) , Joseph Chamberlain France Must Be a Great Country!
(1883), Jules Ferry Germany's Place in the Sun (1900), Kaiser Wilhelm II
The White Man's Burden (1899), Rudyard Kipling To Seek Another's Profit and
Work Another's Gain Your New-Caught Sullen Peoples Education in India: The
Intrinsic Superiority of Western Literature (1835), Thomas Babington
Macaulay Foreign Children, Robert Louis Stevenson A Natural Inclination to
Submit to a Higher Authority (1893) Sir Frederick Dealtry Lugard
The Reflection in the Mirror The Judgment of Your Peers The White Man's
Face: Terror in the Congo, Frederick Starr The Battle Hymn of the Republic
(Brought Down to Date), Mark Twain Chapter 10: Fin de Siècle: The Birth of
the Modern Era The Woman Question and Anti-Feminism Seneca Falls
Declaration (1848) Sisters of America! Your Sisters of France Are United
with You (1851) Pauline Roland and Jeanne Deroine Against Woman Suffrage
(1884), Francis Parkman The Brain Weight of Women is Five Ounces Less Than
That of Men (1887), George Romanes Against the Grain: The Independent Woman
A Doll's House (1879), Henrik Ibsen This Is the Logic of Demons!, Josephine
Butler I Incite This Meeting to Rebellion (1912), Emmeline Pankhurst The
Revolt Against Reason Faith, Love, and Hope: Enough! Enough! (1887),
Friedrich Nietzsche God Is Dead!, Friedrich Nietzsche The Artistic Vision:
The Insular World of Edvard Munch Scream (1893), Edvard Munch
PART III: THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND BEYOND Chapter 11: The Great War
(1914-1918) The Road to War The Celebration of War Without War, No State
Could Exist, Heinrich von Treitschke Blind Obedience to Primitive Instincts
(1910), Norman Angell The Lamps Go Out Over Europe Statutes of The Black
Hand Assassination at Sarajevo: The Plot and Murder (June 28, 1914) The
Sword is Drawn! (August 18, 1914), Kaiser Wilhelm II They Shall Not Pass:
The Great War (1914-1918) The Horror of Battle The Battle of Verdun
(FebruaryDecember 1916) The Battle of the Somme (JulyNovember 1916) No
Man's Land, J. Knight-Adkin What Are You Fighting For, Michel? Against the
Grain: Glory in the Skies: The Red Baron An Englishman for Breakfast Baron
Manfred von Richthofen On the Other Side of the Boundary Ernst Udet It Is
Sweet and Proper to Die for One's Country Five Souls W. N. Ewer A German
War Letter: One Blood-Soaked, Corpse-Strewn Field Richard Schiemder
Renaissance and Reformation SECTION I: THE RENAISSANCE MOVEMENT The
Humanist Movement Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486), Pico della
Mirandola The Soul of Man (1474), Marcilio Ficino The Political Life of
Florence The Rule of Cosimo de'Medici, Vespasiano The Prince: Everyone Sees
What You Appear to Be, Few Perceive What You Are Niccolò Machiavelli
SECTION II: THE REFORMATION ERA The Lutheran Reformation How Many Sins Are
Committed in a Single Day? (1517), Johann Tetzel Salvation Through Faith
Alone, Martin Luther The Ninety-five Theses (1517), Martin Luther Here I
Stand: Address at the Diet of Worms (1521), Martin Luther The Edict of
Worms (1521), Emperor Charles V In the Wake of LutherJohn Calvin and the
Genevan Reformation On the Necessity of Reforming the Church (1544), John
Calvin Predestination: Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), John
Calvin The Catholic Reformation Spiritual Exercises (1548), Ignatius Loyola
The Council of Trent: Profession of Faith The Tridentine Index of Books
(1564) Chapter 2: I Am the State: The Development of Absolutism in England
and France The English Revolution (1649-1689) The Struggle for
Constitutional Government (1650-1660) The Mortal God: Leviathan (1651),
Thomas Hobbes The Instrument of Government (December 16, 1653) Cromwell
Denies the Crown (May 8, 1657), Oliver Cromwell The Reflection in the
Mirror: Oliver Cromwell: The Lord Protector To You Our Country Owes Its
Liberties John Milton Guilty of Crimes for which Hell-Fire Is Prepared,
Edward Hyde The Restoration and the Glorious Revolution (1660-1689) A Force
Sufficient to Defend Us from the Violence of Those Evil Counsellors,
William of Orange The Bill of Rights (1689) The Absolutism of Louis XIV
The Theory of Divine-Right Monarchy The Ideal Absolute State (1697), Jean
Domat Politics and Scripture (1679), Jacques Benigne Bossuet
The Sun King and the Practice of Absolute Rule Vanity Was His Ruin, The
Duke of Saint-Simon Letters to His Heirs: Allow Good Sense to Act, King
Louis XIV A Frightful Plot: The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, The Duke
of Saint-Simon The Artistic Vision: The Palace of Versailles A Celebration
of Greatness, Jean Colbert Visible Majesty, King Louis XIV Chapter 3: Dare
to Know!: The Scientific Revolution Science and the Church The Heliocentric
Statement (ca. 1520), Nicolaus Copernicus On the Movement of the Earth
(1543), Nicolaus Copernicus Science and the Bible: They Would Have Us
Abandon Reason (1615), Galileo Galilei The Reflection in the Mirror:
Galileo Absolved: The Resolution Science and Faith Are Both Gifts from God
(1993) Pope John Paul II The Foundations of Modern Science The Advancement
of Learning (1605), Sir Francis Bacon I Think, Therefore I Am: Discourse on
Method (1637), René Eescartes Against the Grain: On the Circulation of the
Blood (1628) A Motion, As It Were, In a Circle William Harvey Principles of
AnalysisInduction and God: Optics (1704) Sir Isaac Newton
Chapter 4: The Enlightenment and the Revolution of the Mind
Thoughts on the Human Condition and Human Progress
The Blank Slate of the Mind: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
(1690) John Locke
Against the Grain: On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
The Greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number, Cesare Beccaria
Thoughts on Religion
GodA Cause Contradicted by Its Effects: Common Sense (1770), Baron
d'Holbach
On Universal Toleration, Voltaire
If God Did Not Exist, He Would Have to Be Invented, Voltaire
Thoughts on Education
Introduction to the Encyclopedia (1751), Jean Le Rond d'Alembert
We Did Not Live Entirely in Vain (1764), Denis Diderot
Thoughts on Government: The Political Framework
Second Treatise of Civil Government (1690), John Locke
The Spirit of the Laws (1748), Baron de montesquieu
The Social Contract (1762), Jean Jacques Rousseau
The Declaration of Independence (1776), Thomas Jefferson
Thoughts on Women: The Social Framework
Woman: Especially Constituted to Please Man, Jean Jacques Rousseau
A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), Mary Wollstonecraft
Thoughts on Commerce: The Economic Framework
The Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith
PART II : THE ERA OF REVOLUTION
Chapter 5: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity!: The French Revolution
Conditions of Society on the Eve of Revolution
The Corruption of the French Court, Marquis d'Argenson
Ancient Oaks Mutilated by Time , Marquis de Bouille
The Grievances of Carcassonne
Beggars, Rags, and Misery, Arthur Young
The Outbreak of Revolution (17891791)
What Is the Third Estate? (January 1789), the Abbé Aieyès
Women of the Third Estate: We Ask to Be Enlightened (January 1789)
The Tennis Court Oath (June 29, 1789)
The Fall of the Bastille (July 14, 1789)
Declaration of the Rights of Man (August 27, 1789)
Against the Grain: The Flip Side of Liberty
Declaration of the Rights of Woman (1791), Olympe de Gouges
Reflections on the Revolution (1790), Edmund Burke
The Radicalization of the Revolution (17921794)
The Fall of Louis XVI (1792-1793)
The Execution of Louis XVI (January 21, 1793), Henry Edgeworth de Firmont
Proclamation of the Convention to the French People (January 23, 1793)
Reflections on Louis XVI, Mme Roland
The Reflection in the Mirror: A Revolutionary Reality Check
An Update on the Political Rights of Women (1793)
The Reign of Terror (1793-1794)
You Would Exterminate All Your Enemies by the Guillotine! (December 20,
1793), Camille Desmoulins
The Artistic Vision: Jean-Claude Marat: The Martyr of the Revolution
The Death of Marat (1793), Jacques-Louis David
Virtue and Terror: Speech to the Convention (February 5, 1794), Maximilien
Robespierre
The Administration of Terror (June 10, 1794)
The Execution of Robespierre (July 28, 1794), Durand de Maillane
Chapter 6: Paths of Glory: Napoleon and the Romantic Movement
The Napoleonic Era (1796-1815)
The Will to Power (1796-1802)
On the Realities of Power (1796), Napoleon Bonaparte
Suppression of the Newspapers (1800)
Articles for the Catholic Church (1802)
The Imperial Mantle (1804-1806)
The Only Salvation Lies in Hereditary Power (December 1804), Napoleon
Bonaparte
Why the French Submitted to Napoleon's Rule (1804), Comtesse de Rémusat
The Imperial Catechism (April 1806)
Exile and Death: The Hero in History
Napoleon in Exile: We Stand as Martyrs to an Immortal Cause!, Napoleon
Bonaparte
The Role of Great Men in History, G. W. F. Hegel
Against the Grain: Beethoven's Eroica: To the Memory of a Great Man
Portrait of Beethoven, Joseph Karl Stieler Ode to Joy, Friedrich Schiller
The Romantic Movement (1780-1830) The Erlking, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Terror and the Macabre: Frankenstein (1818), Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The Artistic Vision: The Tyrant of Europe Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte, Lord
Byron The Third of May, 1808 , Francisco Goya Chapter 7: A World to Win!:
The Industrial Revolution Rural and Urban Transformations The Dependent
Poor (1795), David Davies How Are Men to Provide for Their Families?: A
Workers Petition (1786) The Urban Landscape The Factory System Sybil
(1845), Benjamin Disraeli The Sadler Report: Not Many as Deformed as I Am
(1832) Child Labor A Defense of the Factory System (1835), Andrew Ure
Living Conditions The Condition of the Working Class in England (1844),
Friedrich Engels The Impact of the Factory System on Women and the Family,
Friedrich Engels
Reaction and Reform Against the Grain: The Horrors of the Slave Trade A
Scene of Horror Almost Inconceivable , Olauda Eqiano We Can No Longer Plead
Ignorance, William Wilberforce Law and Liberty: The Liberal Truth The Iron
Law of Wages (1817), David Ricardo The Chartist Demands (1838) A
Middle-Class Perspective (1859), Samuel Smiles The Artistic Vision: The
Social Perspective by Train Over London by Rail , Gustave Doré Third Class
Carriage , Honoré Daumier Visions of a New World: The Socialist Truth
Utopian Socialism (1816), Robert Owen The Communist Manifesto (1848), Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels The Reflection in the Mirror: A Papal
Perspective: Rerum Novarum (1891) A Yoke Little Better Than That of Slavery
Itself , Pope Leo XIII Chapter 8: Fatherland: The Power of Nationalism
Volksgeist : The Spirit of the People(1815-1850) The Conservative
Confession of Faith, Prince Klemens von Metternich Stirrings: The People
and the Fatherland, Johann Gottlieb Fichte The Duties of Man, Giuseppi
Mazzini The Reflection in the Mirror: The Greek Revolution of 1820 To
Avenge Ourselves Against a Frightful Tyranny Greece on the Ruins of
Missolonghi (1826), Eugène Delacroix A Moderate Amount of Happiness for All
Men, Alexis de Tocqueville 1848: A Great Outburst of Elemental Forces Had
Begun, Carl Schurz
The Political Unification of Italy and Germany (1850-1890) Proclamation for
the Liberation of Sicily (1860), Giuseppe Garibaldi Address to the Italian
Parliament (1871), King Victor Emmanuel II We Germans Fear God, and Nothing
Else in the World: Speech to the Reichstag (1888), Otto von Bismarck
Against the Grain: The Zionist Movement The Basil Program (1897) Chapter 9:
Mark Them with Your Dead!: The Scramble for Global Empire Send Forth the
Best Ye Breed!: The Foundations of Imperialism Racism and the Corruption of
Science The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin The Standpoint of Science
(1900), Karl Pearson For God and Country The Mandate System: Britain's Duty
in Egypt (1890) , Joseph Chamberlain France Must Be a Great Country!
(1883), Jules Ferry Germany's Place in the Sun (1900), Kaiser Wilhelm II
The White Man's Burden (1899), Rudyard Kipling To Seek Another's Profit and
Work Another's Gain Your New-Caught Sullen Peoples Education in India: The
Intrinsic Superiority of Western Literature (1835), Thomas Babington
Macaulay Foreign Children, Robert Louis Stevenson A Natural Inclination to
Submit to a Higher Authority (1893) Sir Frederick Dealtry Lugard
The Reflection in the Mirror The Judgment of Your Peers The White Man's
Face: Terror in the Congo, Frederick Starr The Battle Hymn of the Republic
(Brought Down to Date), Mark Twain Chapter 10: Fin de Siècle: The Birth of
the Modern Era The Woman Question and Anti-Feminism Seneca Falls
Declaration (1848) Sisters of America! Your Sisters of France Are United
with You (1851) Pauline Roland and Jeanne Deroine Against Woman Suffrage
(1884), Francis Parkman The Brain Weight of Women is Five Ounces Less Than
That of Men (1887), George Romanes Against the Grain: The Independent Woman
A Doll's House (1879), Henrik Ibsen This Is the Logic of Demons!, Josephine
Butler I Incite This Meeting to Rebellion (1912), Emmeline Pankhurst The
Revolt Against Reason Faith, Love, and Hope: Enough! Enough! (1887),
Friedrich Nietzsche God Is Dead!, Friedrich Nietzsche The Artistic Vision:
The Insular World of Edvard Munch Scream (1893), Edvard Munch
PART III: THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND BEYOND Chapter 11: The Great War
(1914-1918) The Road to War The Celebration of War Without War, No State
Could Exist, Heinrich von Treitschke Blind Obedience to Primitive Instincts
(1910), Norman Angell The Lamps Go Out Over Europe Statutes of The Black
Hand Assassination at Sarajevo: The Plot and Murder (June 28, 1914) The
Sword is Drawn! (August 18, 1914), Kaiser Wilhelm II They Shall Not Pass:
The Great War (1914-1918) The Horror of Battle The Battle of Verdun
(FebruaryDecember 1916) The Battle of the Somme (JulyNovember 1916) No
Man's Land, J. Knight-Adkin What Are You Fighting For, Michel? Against the
Grain: Glory in the Skies: The Red Baron An Englishman for Breakfast Baron
Manfred von Richthofen On the Other Side of the Boundary Ernst Udet It Is
Sweet and Proper to Die for One's Country Five Souls W. N. Ewer A German
War Letter: One Blood-Soaked, Corpse-Strewn Field Richard Schiemder