This authoritative yet accessible introduction to understanding Europe today moves beyond accounts of European integration to provide a wide-ranging and nuanced study of contemporary Europe and its historical development. This fully updated edition adds material on recent developments, such as Brexit and the migrant and Eurozone crises. The concept of Europe is instilled with a plethora of social, cultural, economic, and political meanings. Throughout history, and still today, scholars writing on Europe, and politicians involved in national or European politics, often disagree on the geographic limits of this space and the defining elements of Europe. Europe is, therefore, first and foremost a concept that takes different shapes and meanings depending on the realm of life on which it is applied and on the historical period under investigation. At a given point in time, depending on the perspective we adopt and the situation in which we find ourselves, Europe may represent very different things. Thus, we should better talk about ‘Europes’ in plural. What is Europe? explores these evolving conceptions of Europe from antiquity to the present. This book is all the more timely as Europe responds to the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Britain’s departure from the European Union, financial slump, refugee emergencies, and the COVID-19 pandemic. This book offers a fully updated introduction to European studies from an interdisciplinary perspective. It is a crucial companion to any undergraduate or graduate course on Europe and the European Union.
Author(s): Anna Triandafyllidou, Ruby Gropas
Edition: 2
Publisher: Routledge | Taylor & Francis Group
Year: 2023
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 279
Tags: Europe: Civilization: 21st Century; National Characteristics, European; Europe: Politics And Government: 21st Century
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Preface
Funding acknowledgement
Chapter 1 What is Europe?: An introduction
Why ask the question?
Defining Europe
Concluding remarks
References
Chapter 2 The changing shape of Europe
The changing shape of Europe in history
Does Europe make history?
Europe and power
Concluding remarks
Notes
References
Chapter 3 Visions of a united Europe
What visions has Europe stirred?
Why unify Europe?
Twentieth-century Europe: war and peace
Europe: institutions and integration
Enlarging the club – how far?
From ‘how to unify Europe’ to ‘what kind of Europe’ and ‘how much Europe’ do we want
Concluding remarks
Note
References
Chapter 4 Cultural Europe
Defining culture
The building blocks of European culture
‘First among equals’: Europe and the ‘Others’
Europe’s most distinctive cultural cleavages
When an aspirational vision of Europe became a dominant cultural narrative
Concluding remarks
References
Chapter 5 European identity – European identities
What is identity?
European identity and national identity
Class and nation within European identity
Diversity as identity
European identity and racism
Religion, European identity, and the Muslim ‘Other’
Concluding remarks
Note
References
Chapter 6 The borders and boundaries of Europe
Why do borders matter? And where does Europe end?
The rise and fall (and rise again) of borders
Changing Europe and its borders
Europe as fortress, with gateways and migrants
Concluding remarks
Note
References
Chapter 7 Political Europe
Politics and political cleavages
Europe’s political systems
Values, ideologies, and main political currents
The political legacies of Europe
European politics transformed and contested
Concluding remarks
References
Chapter 8 The social dimension of Europe
What matters for Europe’s social dimension?
The historical, cultural, and socio-economic foundations of social protection
The transition to the post-industrial phase in Europe
Diversity and welfare state legitimacy
European social model(s)
The EU’s social dimension
Concluding remarks
Note
References
Chapter 9 Global Europe
Europe in world politics, from then to now
The Cold War and the emergence of Europe
What sort of power is the EU?
The EU as a normative power
Europe as a security actor
The EU and global trade
And how do others see Europe as a global actor?
Concluding remarks
References
Chapter 10 Europe is …
The historical viewpoint
Projects and visions of Europe
The cultural dimension of Europe
A European identity or an identification with Europe
Ideological and geographical borders
The European political landscape
A European social model
Geopolitical Europe
Concluding remarks
References
Index