Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing general conceptual underpinnings of the discipline, to the extent that it provides an understanding of the specificity of the modern state and the perceived emergence of modernity within Europe. The association of modernity with Europe (and with a European history limited to the self-identified boundaries of the continent) is commonplace and pervasive within the social sciences and humanities. What such an understanding fails to take into consideration, however, are the connections between Europe and the rest of the world that constitute the broader context for the emergence of what is understood to be the modern world and its institutions, suc...
This paper deals with exchanges and misunderstandings between the German school of social history (m...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This paper deals with exchanges and misunderstandings between the German school of social history (m...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
This article addresses three recent developments in historical sociology: (1) neo-Weberian historica...
Modernity is one of the central concepts of sociology, with sociology itself frequently understood ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Michigan Publishing via the DOI in this rec...
The European project of modernity is usually associated with the development of nation-states (of ci...
The European project of modernity is usually associated with the development of nation-states (of ci...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This paper deals with exchanges and misunderstandings between the German school of social history (m...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This paper deals with exchanges and misunderstandings between the German school of social history (m...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
Historical sociology can be understood both as a specific sub-field of sociology and as providing ge...
This article addresses three recent developments in historical sociology: (1) neo-Weberian historica...
Modernity is one of the central concepts of sociology, with sociology itself frequently understood ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Michigan Publishing via the DOI in this rec...
The European project of modernity is usually associated with the development of nation-states (of ci...
The European project of modernity is usually associated with the development of nation-states (of ci...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This paper deals with exchanges and misunderstandings between the German school of social history (m...
This article revisits the claim, largely accepted within the sociological community for over thirty ...
This paper deals with exchanges and misunderstandings between the German school of social history (m...