The Culture of the Europeans (Text Only Edition)HarperCollins UK, 2012 M06 28 - 1656 pages A magisterial narrative account of the creation and consumption of all forms of ‘culture’ across the European continent over the last two hundred years. This compelling, wide-ranging and hugely ambitious book offers, for the first time ever, an integrated history of the culture produced and consumed by Europeans since 1800, and follows its transformation from an elite activity to a mass market – from lending libraries to the internet, from the first public concerts to music downloads. In itself a cultural tour de force, the book covers high and low culture, readers and writers, audiences and prima donnas, Rossini and hip hop, Verdi and the Beatles, Zola and Tintin, Walter Scott and Jules Verne, the serialised novel of the 19th-century as well as ‘Dallas’ and ‘Coronation Street’. Included in its vast scope are fairytales, bestsellers, crime and sci-fi, non-fiction, magazines, newspapers, comic strips, plays, opera, musicals, pop music, sound recording, films, documentaries, radio and television. A continent-wide survey, this majestic work includes discussions of rock music under communism, Polish and Danish bestsellers, French melodramas and German cabarets, fascist and Soviet cinema. It examines the ways culture travels – how it is produced, transformed, adapted, absorbed, sold and consumed; how it is shaped by audiences and politics, and controlled by laws and conventional morality; why some countries excel in particular genres. It examines the anxiety and attraction felt by Europeans towards American culture, and asks to what extent European culture has become Americanised. Stylishly written, devoid of jargon, this is global non-fiction narrative at its best. Note that it has not been possible to include the same picture content that appeared in the original print version. |
Contents
1733 | |
1746 | |
1757 | |
1779 | |
1799 | |
Fairy Tales | |
Novels | |
Trailblazers | |
The Popular Press | |
Shows | |
Music | |
Recorded Sound | |
The Moving Image | |
Europeans and Americans | |
Cultural Panics | |
States and Markets | |
Walter Scott in Unclouded Splendour 10 Cultural Hegemony | |
This is Not a Fiction | |
News and Pictures | |
The Music Market | |
Audiences and Performers 15 Opera | |
Theatre | |
Books for the People | |
Newspapers Magazines and Pictures | |
Money Matters | |
Reading by Instalments | |
Repressing Culture | |
Beloved Writers | |
Great Genres | |
Women and Novels | |
Challenging the Trailblazers | |
Improving Oneself | |
Music Composers and Virtuosi | |
The Triumph of the Opera | |
Theatricals | |
The Revolution in Communications | |
Workers Jews Women | |
The Internationalisation of the Novel | |
Money Fame and Conscience | |
Stories of Crime and Science Fiction | |
Popular Novels for Young and | |
Culture and Communism | |
Fascism | |
The American Challenge | |
Interwar Cinema | |
The Cinema after World War II | |
More Books | |
Crimes and the Future | |
The Press | |
Comic Strips | |
Live Spectacles | |
The Triumph of the Song | |
Radio | |
The Universal Medium 57 The Flow of Genres on Television | |
The Breakup of Television | |
Cinema and Theatre | |
Communism | |
A World of Readers | |
Exploding | |
The World Wide | |
Index | |
Acknowledgements | |
By the Same Author | |
Copyright | |
About the Publisher | |