1st Edition

Challenges of Labour Central and Western Europe 1917-1920

Edited By Chris Wrigley Copyright 1993

    This collection of essays, all published for the first time in English, provide a fresh look at the critical years of 1917-1920 when revolutionary activity and working-class unrest was rife in Europe. Written by leading authorities in the field, the collection gives wide European coverage, examining developments in the rural provinces and key cities of both Western and Central Europe in the period after the Great War. In-depth studies analyse the causes and extent of protest, the factors which contributed to its initial success and failure and the influence of the propertied classes and re-establishment of the old order. The introduction and conclusion draw the essays together, giving a clear account of the principal themes and establishing the comparative structure of the book. The essays provide major coverage of a crucial period of modern history and should raise many new questions about the events of those years.

    Contributors: Dick Geary, Nottingham University; Wolfram Wette, Germany; John Foster, Paisley College, Scotland; John Horne, University of Dublin; Piero Melograni, Italy; Martin Geyer, Universistat Trier, Germany; Chris Wrigley, Nottingham University; Zsuzsa Nagy, Institute of History, H.A.S., Hungary; Giuseppe Berta, Fondazione Luigi Einaudi, Italy; Elizabeth Dietrich, Universitat Innsbruck, Austria; Ignac Romsics, National Szecheny Library, Hungary; Hans Hautmann, Institut Linz; Roger Magran, University of Warwick

    Biography

    Chris Wrigley

    `The editor, an expert in British labour history , supplies an introduction and conclusion which gives shape and direction to a most welcome volume.' - David Englander History Today