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Empire, State, and Society:

Britain since 1830 (Google eBook)
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1 Review
John Wiley & Sons, Dec 7, 2011 - History - 352 pages
Empire, State, and Society assesses the external and internal forces behind Britain's transformation from global superpower to its current position in the twenty-first century. The authors provide an accessible and balanced introduction, which is thoughtfully organized for ease of use for both students and teachers.
  • Offers a crucial comparative dimension which sets the experience of Britain alongside that of twenty-first-century superpower, the United States of America
  • Draws on recent scholarship to provide a highly current perspective
  • Organised to allow professors to assign readings with more or less depth as student abilities and course lengths allow
  • Written in a style that is wholly accessible and exciting for undergraduates in both the US and the UK
  

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Review: Empire, State, and Society: Britain Since 1830

User Review  - Jon Gagas - Goodreads

Bronstein and Harris manage to combine compression, breadth, and readability in this engaging narrative of changes in late modern Britain. Instead of drowning readers in detail, they accept the ... Read full review

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Contents

List of Illustrations
10 Printer Name Yet to Come
Dark Satanic Mills? Economic and Social Change 18301867 52
Intellectual and Cultural
Politics 18671910 91
98
Economic and Social Change
in Birkenhead 117
Justice 1901
Politics Economics and Social Change
Culture and Ideas between the Wars 19191939 191
Britain in the Second World War 206
Politics 19451979 222
Society and the Economy 19451979 242
54 Printer Name Yet to Come
Copyright

Britain and the Great War 19101918 147

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About the author (2011)

Jamie L. Bronstein is Professor of History at New Mexico State University. She is the author of three books: Land Reform and Working-Class Experience in Britain and the United States, 1800-1862 (1999), Caught in the Machinery: Workplace Accidents and Injured Workers in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2008), and Transatlantic Radical: John Francis Bray (2009).

 Andrew T. Harris is Associate Provost for Faculty Affairs at Bridgewater State University. He is the author of Policing the City: Crime and Legal Authority in London, 1780-1840 (2004).   

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