The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
177 results
Sort by:
Introduction: The past in the present, part I : making sense of a transnational world -- Transnationalism in historical and sociological analysis -- Modernity and the plurality of Europe -- Europe unbounded : critical cosmopolitanism and the problem of Eurocentrism, part II : encounters, routes, transfers and entanglements -- Cultural encounters and European civilisation -- Europe and modernity as reference cultures -- The making of European society and the entanglement of capitalism and democracy -- The legacy of European integration : Europe in the world, part III : looking to the future -- Solidarity as a political legacy for Europe today -- Making sense of Brexit : a divided nation in a divided Europe -- Europe beyond the crisis : re-inventing the European heritage I : making sense of a transnational world.
In: Key ideas
Preface -- Introduction -- Community as an idea : loss and recovery -- Community and society : myths of modernity -- Urban community : locality and belonging -- Political community : communitarianism and citizenship -- Community and difference : varieties of multiculturalism -- Communities of dissent : the idea of communication communities -- Postmodern community : community beyond unity -- Cosmopolitan community : between the local and the global -- Virtual community : belonging as communication -- Conclusion: theorizing community today.
In: Routledge international handbooks
World Affairs Online
Introduction: A Theoretical Framework PART I: SOURCES OF THE EUROPEAN HERITAGE 1. The European Inter-Civilizational Constellation 2. The Greco-Roman and Judaic Legacies 3. Christianity in the Making of Europe 4. The Byzantine Legacy and Russia 5. The Islamic World and Islam in Europe PART II: THE EMERGENCE OF MODERNITY 6. The Renaissance and the Rise of the West Revisited 7. Unity and Division in Early Modern European History: The Emergence of a Westernized Europe 8. The Enlightenment and European Modernity: The Rise of the Idea of Europe 9. The Rise of the Nation-State and the Allure of Empire: Between Nationalism and Cosmopolitanism 10. The Historical Regions of Europe: Civilizational Backgrounds and Multiple Routes to Modernity 11. Europe in the Short Twentieth Century: Conflicting Projects of Modernity PART III: THE PRESENT AND ITS DISCONTENTS 12. Europe Since 1989: Nationalism, Cosmopolitanism and Globalization 13. Age of Austerity: Contradictions of Capitalism and Democracy 14. The European Heritage as a Conflict of Interpretations Conclusion: Europe - a Defence
This innovative publication maps out the broad and interdisciplinary field of contemporary European social theory. It covers sociological theory, the wider theoretical traditions in the social sciences including cultural and political theory, anthropological theory, social philosophy and social thought in the broadest sense of the term. This volume surveys the classical heritage, the major national traditions and the fate of social theory in a post-national and post-disciplinary era. It also identifies what is distinctive about European social theory in terms of themes and traditions. It is di
In: Routledge/European Sociological Association studies in European societies 8
In: Studies in European Sociology
This major new book tackles key questions on Europe in the context of shifting parameters of East and West. The contributors - sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers and historians - show, from a variety of different perspectives, that the conventional equation of Europe with the West must be questioned. Featuring four thematically organized chapters, the book looks at: a post-Western world Asia in Europe: encounters in history between Europe and Asia otherness in Europe and Asia. Exploring new expressions of European self-understanding in a way that challenges recent ideological notions of the 'clash of civilizations', this outstanding work draws on recent scholarship that shows how Europe and Asia were mutually linked in history and in contemporary perspective. It argues that as a result of current developments and the changing geopolitical context, both Europe and Asia have much in common and that it is possible to speak of cosmopolitan links rather than clashes. This book will be of great value to students and researchers in the fields of sociology, European politics and history and cultural theory.
In: Concepts in the social sciences