
A Social History Of Twentieth-century Europe Offers A Systematic Overview On Major Aspects Of Social Life, Including Population, Family And Households, Social Inequalities And Mobility, The Welfare State, Work, Consumption And Leisure, Social Cleavages In Politics, Urbanization As Well As Education, Religion And Culture. It Also Addresses Major Debates And Diverging Interpretations Of Historical And Social Research Regarding The History Of European Societies In The Past One Hundred Years. Organized In Ten Thematic Chapters, This Book Takes An Interdisciplinary Approach, Making Use Of The Methods And Results Of Not Only History, But Also Sociology, Demography, Economics And Political Science. Béla Tomka Presents Both The Diversity And The Commonalities Of European Societies Looking Not Just To Western European Countries, But Eastern, Central And Southern European Countries As Well. A Perfect Introduction For All Students Of European History.
This book investigates the structural evolution of European society throughout the twentieth century by analyzing the commonalities and divergences across its various regions. Author Béla Tomka, a scholar of European social history, utilizes an interdisciplinary framework that integrates data from sociology, demography, economics, and political science. By synthesizing these diverse fields, the text provides a comprehensive overview of how social life, institutions, and cultural norms shifted across Western, Eastern, Central, and Southern Europe over the last hundred years.
What You Will Find
Experts and academic reviewers recognize this work as a foundational, systematic introduction to the complexities of European social development. Readers frequently note the density of the research and the author's success in balancing broad regional comparisons with specific thematic analysis.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2013-01-01
Publisher:
Routledge,
ISBN-10:
0415628431
ISBN-13:
9780203375358
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