From Citizens to Subjects: City, State, and the Enlightenment in Poland, Ukraine, and Belarus

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Product Details
Price
$63.25
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
312
Dimensions
6.0 X 8.9 X 0.9 inches | 1.05 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780822964629

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About the Author
Curtis G. Murphy is assistant professor in the Department of History, Philosophy, and Religious Studies at Nazarbayev University in Astana, Kazakhstan.
Reviews
This ambitious and significant monograph challenges a widely encountered narrative that assumes that enlightened centralizing government brought progress and order in place of the 'archaic' privileges and exemptions that held back urban growth in early modern Europe. Based on a wide range of sources and spanning the traditional Polish caesura of 1795, this is a refreshing work that should also find its place in wider arguments about the efficacy of centralization and decentralization in the modern state.-- "Richard Butterwick-Pawlikowski, University College London"
Clear, concise, and crisp, Murphy's writing style provides accessible analysis of complicated realities that many scholars in the field would like to understand but rarely find the time to master.-- "The Russian Review"
Murphy's work is a breath of fresh air. . . . Instead of accepting the narrative of the Enlightenment as a rational system of social and political improvement, Murphy refreshingly approaches it as a belief system instead--one that was especially liable to fail when grafted onto a world animated by radically different values, such as liberty and self-government.-- "European History Quarterly"
He innovatively examines how discourses of governmentality and improved efficiency served to mask the centralizing prepossessions of an Enlightenment project--that is, applications of nationality and progress against republican liberties.-- "Steven Seegel, University of Northern Colorado"