Introduction
Part One: Eighteenth-Century Background
1: Eighteenth-Century Politics
2: Eighteenth-Century Society
3: Eighteenth-Century Culture
Part Two: Germans and the French Revolution, 1789-1815:
Confrontation and Defeat
4: Mastering the Revolution
5: Culture in the Revolutionary Era
Part Three: The Limits of Restoration, 1815-1848
6: Restoration Politics, 1815-1830
7: Growth and Stagnation in German Society
8: The Cultural Establishments and its Critics
9: The Growth of Participatory Politics, 1830-1838
Part Four: Towards a New Order, 1848-1866: Revoltion and
Reaction
10: Society in the Age of the Bürgertum
11: Political Opportunities and Alternatives
Conclusion
'This book is sure to be regarded as indispensable to students of
German history. It has much to offer scholars in other fields as
well, particularly those concerned with the genesis of modern
nationalism ... Sheehan's book is a kind of summing-up of the work
of his own scholarly generation. His colleagues could hardly ask
for a more worthy tribute.'
Daniel Moran, University of Northern Colorado, The International
History Review
`German History 1770-1866 leads the reader on a remarkable journey
through the social, cultural and political history of the people of
the German nation.'
The European Studies Journal, Volume IX, Number 1, Spring 1992
'Every historian worth his salt should strive to produce such a
book. Its length is its most immediately striking characteristic:
969 pages.'
Panikos Panayi, History Today
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