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The Long 19th Century: European History from 1789 to 1917

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The Long 19th Century: European History from 1789 to 1917

By: Robert I. Weiner, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Robert I. Weiner
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About this listen

Few periods of history offer such captivating complexity as Europe in the long 19th century between 1789 and 1914. From the idealism of the French Revolution to the power of the Industrial Revolution to the chaos of World War I, this fascinating whirl of events, personalities, and forces formed the foundation for the modern world.

Over the course of 36 engaging lectures Professor Weiner leads you on a spirited journey across an ever-changing European landscape, examining the forces and personalities that reshaped the continent's physical borders, diplomatic relationships, and balance of power. Assuming no prior knowledge of this era and no professional vocabulary, he explores this turbulent and important era with interest, curiosity, and passion.

You'll look at what the transition to modernity meant for peasants, workers, the middle class, aristocrats, women, and minorities. And you'll consider the political and diplomatic moves of the great powers - Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia, and Italy - in the context of the deeper economic, social, and cultural forces at work and how they reflect the impact of some of history's most significant names, including Napoleon Bonaparte, Otto von Bismarck, and Kaiser Wilhelm II.

With this ambitious look at the evolution of the environment that ultimately made World War I possible, Professor Weiner explores more than factual history - the dates, battles, and treaties. He repeatedly steps back from on-the-ground events to clarify historical trends or patterns, providing a comprehensive look at this engaging era.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2005 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2005 The Great Courses
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OK but limited.

A surprisingly old fashioned course. Very much in the Whig progress + Great Man school of history, including a rather uncritical view of "modernity" as the logical endpoint of history. The focus on the Great Powers (Britain, France, Germany, Russia and Austria-Hungary plus Italy) is understandable but terribly relentless. It is as if Spain, Portugal, the low countries and Scandinavia didn't exist.The delivery is a bit distracting: not just the pace and pauses, but the language at times. I may be being picky here, but Dr Weiner seems to think that 'punic' = 'punitive', that 'divulge' = 'divest', and that 'Crimean' and 'papacy' are pronounced 'Crimmean' and 'pappacy'. Also that England and Britain are interchangeable and that the High Anglican Gladstone was a nonconformist. If you want a rather old- school series about the politics of the six 'Great Powers' between the French Revolution and WW I, though, the course seems pretty sound within its limits.

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Excellent interpretive overview

Robert Weiner provides a thought provoking overview of this fascinating period. I've listened to it twice now and will again. Each lecture is packed with ideas. He adopts more of an interpretive approach rather than just reciting events although he does provide the context necessary. I also appreciated the excellent notes and recommendations for further reading. There is a noticeable emphasise on diplomatic history but other aspects are covered. My only minor criticism is that his vocal volume tends to go up and down a wee bit too much, although I was still able to hear everything. Excellent and I hope the Great Courses release a version of his course on the twentieth century.

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