《联动的世界史》1840年代至1910年代,欧美列强积极扩张,各地民众运动此起彼伏。本书突破国别史框架,以国际关系史为基础,从全球史视角描述世界紧张局势的形成和转移,以及日本如何捕捉世界历史“潮流”,并将其“本土化”。
作者简介
南塚信吾,生于1942年,1970年于东京大学大学院社会学研究科修完博士课程,研究方向为匈牙利史,国际关系史。现任历史文化交流论坛附属世界史研究所所长,千叶大学、法政大学名誉教授。著有《东欧经济史研究:世界资本主义与匈牙利》《安静的革命:匈牙利农民与人民主义》《义贼传说》《不需要世界历史?》
From the 1840s to the 1910s, the European and American powers were actively expanding, and popular movements were one after another. This book breaks through the framework of national history, based on the history of international relations, and describes the formation and transfer of world tensions from a global historical perspective, as well as how Japan captured the "trend" of world history and "localized" it.
About the author
Shingo Minamizuka, born in 1942, completed his PhD in Sociology at the Graduate School of Sociology at the University of Tokyo in 1970, focusing on Hungarian history and the history of international relations. He is currently the director of the Institute of World History affiliated to the Forum for Historical and Cultural Exchange, and an honorary professor of Chiba University and Hosei University. He is the author of A Study in the Economic History of Eastern Europe: World Capitalism and Hungary, The Quiet Revolution: Hungarian Peasants and Populism, The Legend of the Righteous Thief, and No Need for World History?