The Space of Crisis
Images and Ideas of Europe in the Age of Crisis: 1914–1945
Schulz-Forberg, Hagen / Strath, Bo / Dini, Vittorio / D'Auria, Matthew
Erschienen am
29.07.2013
Beschreibung
investigates how notions of crisis and changing perceptions of space influenced the way Europe imagined itself, helping reassess some of the assumptions of historians and political theorists about the way intellectuals interpreted Europe’s crisis during the 1920s and 1930s.
Autorenportrait
Vittorio Dini was for many years Head of the Department of Sociology and Political Sciences at the University of Salerno, where he taught history of philosophy and history of political thought.
Matthew D’Auria is a research fellow at the University of Salerno and has taught European history and social and political thought at University College London, where he received his PhD.
Inhalt
Contents: Annamaria Amato: Einaudi, Agnelli and Cabiati. Criticizing the League of Nations and Imagining European Unity – Adalgiso Amendola: The crisis of European Public Law. The Search for a Post-Statist Juridical Space – Laurie Catteeuw: Reason of State in the European Intellectual Space during the Interwar Period – Matthew D’Auria: «Against the state». Carlo Rosselli and the Social Space of European Federalism – Richard Deswarte: An American Future? Perceptions of the United States and the Idea of Europe in the Interwar Period – Annamaria Ducci: The French Museum as a Paradigm of Europe’s Crisis. Some Reflections on Paul Valéry’s Writings – Francesca Ferraro: The Kelsen / Schmitt Debate. Heller’s Solution and the Future of Europe – Zoran Milutinovi: Europe as
– Anita Prettenthaler-Ziegerhofer:
: Coudenhove-Kalergi’s
and Rohan’s
– Jan Vermeiren: Nation State and Empire in German Political Thought. Europe and the Myth of the Reich – Adriano Vinale: Crisis and Democracy. Dewey’s
.