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Europe After Empires Fell
O książce
The maps were redrawn. The empires were gone. But the peoples, grievances, and ambitions that had built them remained. Europe After Empires Fell examines the long and turbulent aftermath of imperial collapse—tracing how the dissolution of the Habsburg, Ottoman, Russian, and German empires between 1918 and 1945 unleashed forces that would reshape European identity, borders, and political culture for generations.
This book moves beyond the familiar narratives of victors and treaties to examine what collapse actually meant at the human level: the displacement of millions, the violent negotiation of new national identities, the rise of successor states struggling to govern ethnically mixed populations with borrowed institutions, and the ideological vacuums that authoritarian movements rushed to fill. It then follows these threads through the Cold War settlement, showing how the unresolved tensions of imperial dissolution continued to haunt European politics well into the 1970s.
Drawing on diplomatic archives, personal testimony, and regional historiography from across the continent, this is a panoramic yet intimate account of how modern Europe was assembled from the ruins of the world it destroyed—and how much of that assembly work remains, to this day, unfinished.
