Veuillez tenir compte de nos horaires d’ouverture pendant les fêtes.
Thèmes principaux
Publications
Services
Auteurs
Éditions
Shop

Spies in European Culture, 1815-1914

Representations, Networks, Practices

Contenu

This volume brings together academics from the USA and across Europe to examine the nature, representations and perceptions of the figure of the spy in Europe between 1815 and 1914. As such, it is the first scholarly investigation of the genesis both of contemporary espionage and of the cultural imagination associated with it.

Spies in European Culture, 1815-1914 sheds light on the founding moment of espionage and the use of secrecy in politics in the contemporary age. It successfully argues that the 19th century saw the development of a cultural-historical process in which disruptive novelties like the disguise, the secret and the double identity simultaneously assailed the spheres of the state, the self and the imaginary, ushering in distinctive features of society in the modern era in the process. This global phenomenon, in which state and society, but also reality and fiction, were profoundly intertwined, is therefore investigated by means of a transdisciplinary analysis that considers both the politico-institutional and the cultural planes that existed at the time.

Informations bibliographiques

février 2025, env. 216 Pages, Anglais
Bloomsbury
978-1-350-42729-7

Sommaire

Mots-clés

Autres titres sur ce thème