@Book{86071585X, editor="Sluga, Glenda and Clavin, Patricia", title="Internationalisms: a twentieth-century history", year="2017", publisher="Cambridge University Press", address="Cambridge, United Kingdom", keywords="Internationalism; History; Political aspects; Economic aspects; Cultural relations; Transnationalism; Imperialism; Nationalism; World politics; International relations; 20th century", abstract="``At the turn of the twenty-first century, historical studies of internationalism--above and beyond the call to the workers of the world to unite--have become the norm in a relatively short space of time. This shift has occurred in the context of a historical vogue for 'transnationalism,' that is, capturing experiences that traversed and transcended the borders of nation-states both within and beyond the European world. The work of the diplomatic historian Akira Iriye has been central to these developments, illuminating the traces of a distinctively twentieth century history of 'cultural internationalism' that resonated through the realms of politics. Following in the footsteps of Iriye and others--including feminist and pacifist historians who had long engaged the internationalist past--a new cohort of international historians, often sensitive to cultural analyses and with expertise in imperial and transnational as well as national histories, are now accruing broad-ranging evidence of the geographies of internationalism and the political and economic reach of its various strands at critical moments in the twentieth century''--", note="edited by Glenda Sluga (University of Sydney), Patricia Clavin (University of Oxford)", note="Literaturangaben", isbn="9781107645080", language="English" }