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MODERNISATION AS SOCIAL EVOLUTION: THE GERMAN CASE, c. 1800–1880

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2005

Abstract

This essay outlines a theory of modernisation that is related to changes in the German lands. Modernisation is defined as societal transformation from corporate to functionally specialised institutions. The focus is upon institutions as modes of power (coercive, economic, cultural) and how these modernise through processes of social evolution. Specific types of change are considered for the periods 1800–15 (coercive-political power), 1815–48 (economic power), the revolutions of mid-century (cultural power) and the era of German unification (coercive-military power). A concluding section considers the main patterns of modernisation over the whole period and the kind of modern social order that had been achieved by 1880.

(READ 23 January 2004 AT THE GERMAN HISTORICAL INSTITUTE, LONDON)

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society2005

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