E-Book, Deutsch, Englisch, Band 21, 450 Seiten
Reihe: Historische Politikforschung
E-Book, Deutsch, Englisch, Band 21, 450 Seiten
Reihe: Historische Politikforschung
ISBN: 978-3-593-41988-6
Verlag: Campus
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
verbale, symbolische und teils auch gewalthafte Kommunikation. Diese Grenzziehungen und Kommunikationsformen werden an ausgewählten Beispielen dargestellt, um schließlich die Frage zu beantworten, was auf der Agenda einer künftigen historischen
Politikforschung stehen sollte.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Contents;6
2;I. Introduction;10
3;The Political as Communicative Space in History: The Bielefeld Approach - Willibald Steinmetz and Heinz-Gerhard Haupt;12
4;II. Contested Concepts: »Politics« and »the Political«;36
5;Introduction - Willibald Steinmetz;38
6;From »Interest« to the »Political«: Speaking of Ruling and Reigning in Early Modern Europe – Martin Papenheim;46
7;From a Despised French Word to a Dominant Concept: The Evolution of »Politics« in Swedish and Finnish Parliamentary Debates – Pasi Ihalainen ;58
8;What Did They Mean by Política? Debating over the Concept, Value, and Place of Politics in Modern Spain – Javier Fernández Sebastián;100
9;Navigating Around Politics: British Progressive Thought and the »Political« in an Expanding Transnational Perspective – Michael Freeden;128
10;III. Boundary Disputes: The Political and Other Spheres;148
11;Introduction – Heinz-Gerhard Haupt;150
12;Drawing Boundaries between Politics and Religion: Early Modern Politics Revisited – Matthias Pohlig;156
13;Political Economy and Statistics in the Late Ancien Régime – Lars Behrisch;176
14;Laws as the Basis and Object of Political Communication – Christoph Gusy;192
15;Depoliticalisation of the Private Life? Reflections on Private Practices and the Political in the Late Soviet Union – Kirsten Bönker;208
16;Moving across Boundaries: Rudolf Virchow between Medicine and Politics – Tobias Weidner;236
17;IV. Violence: Means, Object or End of Political Communication?;252
18;Introduction – Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey;254
19;»Catholic and Breton Forever«: Violence and the Visual in Early Twentieth-Century France – Eveline G. Bouwers;260
20;The Limits of the Legitimate: The Quarrel over »Violence« between Autonomist Groups and the German Authorities – Freia Anders and Alexander Sedlmaier;292
21;Vie chère, Violent Protest, and Visions of Protection: The Vie chère Controversy on the Eve of WWI in France (1905–1914) – Marcel Streng;318
22;V. Epilogue: Moving beyond the »New« Political History;350
23;Writing Political History after the »Iconic Turn« – Bettina Brandt;352
24;The Political, the State, and Governance: Reflections on Essentially Contested Concepts – Thomas Risse;360
25;Historical Politics Research – Luise Schorn-Schütte;370
26;The Opening Up of Political History – Henk te Velde;384
27;Political History Matters: Everyday Life, Things, and Practices – Frank Trentmann;398
28;Notes on Contributors;410