A House Divided: Catholics, Socialists, and Flemish Nationalists in Nineteenth-Century Belgium
By (Author) Carl Strikwerda
Contributions by Xiangming Chen
Contributions by Bruce Cumings
Contributions by Gary Gereffi
Contributions by Evelyn Hu-DeHart
Contributions by Donald M. Nonini
Contributions by Neferti Xina M. Tadiar
Contributions by Rob Wilson
Contributions by Meredith Woo-Cumings
Contributions by Alexander Woodside
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
29th August 1997
United States
General
Non Fiction
Politics and government
949.303
Paperback
420
Width 146mm, Height 230mm, Spine 27mm
635g
The first book to explore the historical development of Belgian politics, this groundbreaking study of the rivalry between Catholicism, Socialism, and nationalism is essential reading for anyone interested in Europe before World War I.
Strikwerda makes his case with an impressive command of comparative European political history. -- D. G. Troyansky, Texas Tech University * Choice Reviews *
One of the finest books on Belgium to appear in many years. It will be of great interest to French and German historians as well as Belgian scholars. -- Kenneth Barkin, University of California, Riverside
Strikwerda's insightful analyses of Belgian society and politics transform our understandings of the social and political history of the industrial age. -- Donald Reid, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Strikwerda's authoritative study of the political emergence of the working class in Belgium makes a major contribution to the history of the beginnings of mass politics in the period between about 1870 and 1914. -- Hugh Mcleod, The University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
A model of patient historical reconstruction. -- Kenneth D. McRae, Carleton University
An original and thoroughly researched study . . . it fills a sizable gap in the history of modern Europe. -- John Merriman, Yale University
A very important work, throughly researched. Strikwerda's book will be a must for labour scholars. -- Jean Stengers, Brussels * English Historcal Review *
Strikwerda does not retell the history of national movements or parties, but lokks locally to analyze institutions that embodied 'working class solidarity.'
Strikwerda's meticulous research in primary sources, as well as the encyclopedic range of his secondary scholarship, allows him to build upon and often to counter effectively the story told by Belgian historians of their own labor movements. This book should interest European labor historians who too easily overlook Belgium.
...substantial and important study...
Strikwerda's admirably wide-ranging book therefore deserves to be read by a wide audience.
Equipped with a wealth of primary research, the author is at ease with Flemish Dutch sources...
Carl Strikwerda is associate professor of history at the University of Kansas, and the coeditor, with Camille Guerin-Gonzales, of The Politics of Immigrant Workers: Labor Activism and Migration in the World Economy Since 1930.