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Revolutionary Spring
2023 non-fiction book by Christopher Clark From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Revolutionary Spring: Fighting for a New World 1848–1849 is a book written by Christopher Clark and published by the Crown Books division of Penguin Random House in 2023. It explores the history of the European revolutions of 1848.[1][2]
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Structure
Work begins with an introduction by the author and is followed by nine chapters and a conclusion plus appendices and indexes.[3]
- Introduction
- Social Questions
- Conjecture of Order
- Confrontation
- Detonations
- Regime Change
- Emancipations
- Entropy
- Counter-revolution
- After 1848
- Conclusion
Reviews
- Green, A. (2023), "A panoramic account of the continent-wide outbreak of revolutions in 1848", The Times Literary Supplement, retrieved 17 July 2023
- Heffer, S. (2023), "The link between French revolutionaries, Italian rebels – and Brexiteers", The Telegraph, retrieved 17 July 2023
- Malik, K. (2023), "Revolutionary Spring by Christopher Clark review – the revolts that reshaped Europe", The Guardian, retrieved 17 July 2023
- Sandbrook, D. (2023), "Revolutionary Spring by Christopher Clark review — what can 1848 teach us?", The Times, retrieved 17 July 2023
- Zevin, A. (2023), "The Only Revolutions That Matter", The New York Times, retrieved 17 July 2023
- "Revolutionary Spring — how 1848 shaped the modern world", The Financial Times, 2023, retrieved 17 July 2023
- Sebestyen, V. (2023), "When nationalism was woke", The Critic, retrieved 17 July 2023
- ""Revolutionary Spring" brings to life the drama and daring of 1848", The Economist, retrieved 17 July 2023
- "The Revolutions of 1848 Should Be a Historical Touchstone for Socialists Today", The Jacobin, retrieved 17 July 2023
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Publication history
- Hardcover and ebook: Revolutionary Spring: Fighting for a New World 1848–1849. Crown Publishing Group. 2023.
- Audiobook: Revolutionary Spring: Fighting for a New World 1848–1849. Penguin Random House Audio. 2023.
About the author
Sir Christopher Munro Clark FBA (born 14 March 1960) is a controversial Australian historian living in the United Kingdom and Germany. He is the twenty-second Regius Professor of History at the University of Cambridge. In the 2015 Birthday Honours, he was knighted for his services to Anglo-German relations.[4]
Similar or related works
- The Pursuit of Power by Richard J. Evans
- The Age of Revolution: 1789-1848 by Eric Hobsbawm
See also
References
External links
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