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Familial State: Ruling Families and Merchant Capitalism in Early Modern Europe

Contributor(s): Adams, Julia (Author)

ISBN: 9780801433085

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Hardcover
$64.95
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Pub Date: September 19, 2005

Dewey: 949.204

LCCN: 2005007513

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.74" H x 9.30" L x 6.34" W ( 1.05 lbs) 252 pages

Series: The Wilder House Politics, History and Culture

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

The seventeenth century was called the Dutch Golden Age. Over the course of eighty years, the tiny United Provinces of the Netherlands overthrew Spanish rule and became Europe's dominant power. Eventually, though, Dutch hegemony collapsed as quickly...

Brief description: Julia Adams is Professor of Sociology at Yale University.

Review Quotes:

Seldom have two hundred pages displayed such ambitious goals and achieved them with such a remarkable fluency. Julia Adams examines state formation and familial institutions in three early modern European countries: the Netherlands, France, and England. In so doing, she restores the Dutch experience to the centrality that it commanded in the seventeenth century. The book also suggests to national historians and historical sociologists that a narrow focus just cannot answer the big questions posed by the very histories so ubiquitously practiced by the current generation of one-nation historians. Comfortable being both genuinely comparative and firmly grounded in her own field, historical sociology, Adams further argues that the old categories deployed by historical analysis--state structures, class, religion, and patronage--cannot address the complexity of power without also addressing gender--more precisely, patrimony--as a force of immense historical significance.... This is a book that should now become required reading in every graduate seminar in early modern European history. It challenges us all to think outside the box that is the history of the nation, and it rewards such thinking with fresh insight into issues of gender, class, and state formation. It is a triumph.

--Margaret C. Jacob "Journal of Modern History"

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