Regional Identity and Economic Change
The Upper Rhine 1450-1600
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:8th Jan '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The current debate about the best methods of European organization - central or regional - is influenced by an awareness of regional identity, which offers an alternative to the rigidities of organization by nation-state. Yet where does the sense of regionalism come from? What are the distinctive factors that transform a geographical area into a particular 'region'? Tom Scott addresses these questions in this study of one apparently 'natural' region - the Upper Rhine - between 1450 and 1600. This region has been divided between three countries and so historically marginalized, yet Dr Scott is able to trace the existence of a sense of historical regional identity cutting across national frontiers, founded on common economic interests. But that identity was always contingent and precarious, neither 'natural' nor immutable.
Tom Scott has written a learned, well-reasoned, and sophisticated piece of scholarship with a superbly detailed bibliography. This book offers much to someone interested in the Upper Rhine and in economic development in preindustrial Europe. * Sixteenth Century Journal *
ISBN: 9780198206446
Dimensions: 225mm x 146mm x 25mm
Weight: 561g
372 pages