Book contents
- Globalizing Europe
- Globalizing Europe
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Global Europe
- 2 Global Conjunctures and the Remaking of European Political History
- 3 Making Europe’s Economy
- 4 European Intellectual History after the Global Turn
- 5 Religion and the Global History of Europe
- 6 European Social History and the Global Turn
- 7 Europe’s Place in Global Environmental History
- 8 Global Turns in European History and the History of Consumption
- 9 Global Material Culture in Early Modern and Modern Europe
- 10 Migration and European History’s Global Turn
- 11 Race in the Global History of Europe
- 12 Globalizing European Gender History
- 13 Globalizing Europe’s Musical Past
- 14 Global Histories of European Art
- 15 Globalizing European Military History
- 16 Deglobalizing the Global History of Europe
- Afterword: Global Histories of Modern Europe
- Index
2 - Global Conjunctures and the Remaking of European Political History
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2025
- Globalizing Europe
- Globalizing Europe
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Global Europe
- 2 Global Conjunctures and the Remaking of European Political History
- 3 Making Europe’s Economy
- 4 European Intellectual History after the Global Turn
- 5 Religion and the Global History of Europe
- 6 European Social History and the Global Turn
- 7 Europe’s Place in Global Environmental History
- 8 Global Turns in European History and the History of Consumption
- 9 Global Material Culture in Early Modern and Modern Europe
- 10 Migration and European History’s Global Turn
- 11 Race in the Global History of Europe
- 12 Globalizing European Gender History
- 13 Globalizing Europe’s Musical Past
- 14 Global Histories of European Art
- 15 Globalizing European Military History
- 16 Deglobalizing the Global History of Europe
- Afterword: Global Histories of Modern Europe
- Index
Summary
Since the 2010s, the writing of European history – in both its incarnations, as the history of Europe and as the histories of nations in Europe – has seen fundamental transformations. Though it has been adapted in different ways, the global turn has deeply affected the historiography produced in many European countries. On the one hand, crucial watersheds of European history have been reinterpreted as part of larger configurations and as responses to global challenges. On the other hand, it is now clear that Europe’s claim to unity and cohesion was reinforced, not least, by observers from without. In the late nineteenth century, in societies across Latin America, Africa, and Asia, contemporaries began to refer to a “Europe” that was less a specific location than a product of the imagination; the result less of geography or culture than of global geopolitics. What emerges, then, is an understanding of the history of the continent that places it firmly in the context of global conjunctures and repeated moments of reterritorialization.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Globalizing EuropeA History, pp. 27 - 41Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025