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Networking Europe: Transnational Infrastructures and the Shaping of Europe, 1850 - 200

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Politicians, businessmen, engineers, and the military have long recognized, both in peace and war, the pivotal role of transnational infrastructures. Historians, on the other hand, have so far failed to describe and analyze this issue. This book considers the building of transnational networks of railways, telegraphs, highways, and power lines as a window on the shaping of contemporary Europe. It dismisses accounts that a linear, increasingly integrated infrastructural expansion produces a progressively interlaced Europe. Instead, it contends that such processes were characterized by ambiguities and tensions, intertwined with hopes, fears, and the agendas of many historical players as well as conflict-ridden economic and political events. The chapters discuss cases of transnational infrastructural integration and fragmentation in various eras and regions in nineteenth and twentieth century Europe.

342 pages, Hardcover

Published October 27, 2006

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About the author

Arne Kaijser

9 books

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