ABSTRACT

First Published in 1987. Presented as two sections, the first includes three surveys which aim to describe and comment on some of radial changes in the questions historians have been asking about the past and some of the new data, tools and methodology they have developed to answer them. The second is a collection of essays that were originally reflective book reviews and are concerned with the theme of how and why did Western Europe change itself during the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries so as to lay the social, economic, scientific, political, ideological and ethical foundations for the rationalist, democratic, individualistic, technological industrialized society in which we now live.

part I|96 pages

Historiography

part II|314 pages

The emergence of the modern world

chapter Chapter 4|22 pages

The Reformation

chapter Chapter 5|33 pages

Terrible times: the 1530s

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

Revolution and reaction

chapter Chapter 7|12 pages

The crisis of the seventeenth century

chapter Chapter 8|21 pages

Magic, religion and reason

chapter Chapter 9|7 pages

Catholicism

chapter Chapter 10|9 pages

Puritanism

chapter Chapter 11|7 pages

Court and Country

chapter Chapter 12|19 pages

The new eighteenth century

chapter Chapter 13|11 pages

The Law

chapter Chapter 14|16 pages

The university

chapter Chapter 15|27 pages

Madness

chapter Chapter 16|16 pages

Homicide and violence

chapter |16 pages

Children and the family

chapter Chapter 18|17 pages

Love

chapter Chapter 19|39 pages

Sexuality

chapter Chapter 20|10 pages

Old age

chapter |18 pages

Death