Modernity and Bourgeois Life: Society, Politics, and Culture in England, France and Germany since 1750
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 4/12/2012
EAN 9781107666788, ISBN10: 1107666783
Paperback, 638 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 3.7 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
To be modern may mean many different things, but for nineteenth-century Europeans 'modernity' suggested a new form of life in which bourgeois activities, people, attitudes and values all played key roles. Jerrold Seigel's panoramic new history offers a magisterial and highly original account of the ties between modernity and bourgeois life, arguing that they can be best understood not in terms of the rise and fall of social classes, but as features of a common participation in expanding and thickening 'networks of means' that linked together distant energies and resources across economic, political and cultural life. Exploring the different configurations of these networks in England, France and Germany, he shows how their patterns gave rise to distinctive forms of modernity in each country and shaped the rhythm and nature of change across spheres as diverse as politics, money and finance, gender relations, morality, and literary, artistic and musical life.
Preface
1. Introduction
ends and means
Part I. Contours of Modernity
2. Precocious integration
England
3. Monarchical centralization, privilege, and conflict
France
4. Localism, state-building, and bürgerliche gesellschaft
Germany
5. Modern industry, class, and party politics in nineteenth-century England
6. France and bourgeois France
from teleocracy to autonomy
7. One special path
modern industry, politics, and bourgeois life in Germany
Part II. Calculations and Lifeworlds
8. Time, money, capital
9. Men and women
10. Bourgeois morals
from Victorianism to modern sexuality
11. Jews as bourgeois and network people
Part III. A Culture of Means
12. Public places, private spaces
13. Bourgeois and others
14. Bourgeois life and the avant-garde
15. Conclusion.
Advance praise: 'This is an impressive work of synthesis which tracks more than a century of bourgeois life in Europe. And the bourgeois world Seigel conjures is a complex one, born of ever more tightly woven patterns of communication and exchange, never fixed but changing over time, and always an unstable mix of the structured and the fluid. Rarely has the subject been treated with such sweep and sympathy.' Philip Nord, Princeton University
'A virtuoso performance in a powerful survey with an eye for the telling contrast and the shrewd comparison: England - at once the most bourgeois and the least; France - homeland of revolution yet slow to change, and Germany, where bourgeois politics was expressed by not yet modern bourgeois classes.' Donald Sassoon, Queen Mary, University of London
'Jerrold Seigel dazzles the reader with an array of original arguments across European time and space, and gives new credibility to transformational claims for Western Europe's middle classes. He convincingly shows how the articulation of new bourgeois networks in various spheres of activity cumulatively altered European society and culture.' Isser Woloch, Columbia University
'Jerry Seigel's ambitious and important new book offers a fresh interpretation of Europe's 'great transformation' (1750–1914) that is as cogent as it is challenging. Immensely learned, vividly detailed and impressively comprehensive, Modernity and Bourgeois Life combines a broad synthesis of the social and cultural history of modern western Europe with an original and compelling argument regarding the place of bourgeois actors in the gradual and uneven emergence of modern life in economic, cultural and political realms. Beautifully written and sharply argued, Seigel's narrative is shot through with luminous insights, telling individual portraits and clear and engaging explanations of sometimes quite difficult material. A pleasure to read, [this book] invites its readers on a genial voyage of discovery, or re-discovery, of recent European landscapes they thought they already knew.' Laura Lee Downs, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris