Citizens to Lords: Difference between revisions

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'''* Book: Citizens to Lords. A SOCIAL HISTORY OF WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE LATE MIDDLE AGES. By ELLEN MEIKSINS WOOD. Verso, Penguin / Random House, 2011.'''
'''* Book: Citizens to Lords. A SOCIAL HISTORY OF WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE LATE MIDDLE AGES. By ELLEN MEIKSINS WOOD. Verso, Penguin / Random House, 2011.'''


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[[Category:P2P Class Theory]]
=More information=
[[Category:Books]]
 
[[Category:P2P History]]
* Related, from the same author: [[Peasant-Citizen and Slave]].
[[Category:Politics]]


[[Category:P2P Class Theory]]
[[Category:P2P Class Theory]]

Latest revision as of 08:14, 19 November 2021

* Book: Citizens to Lords. A SOCIAL HISTORY OF WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE LATE MIDDLE AGES. By ELLEN MEIKSINS WOOD. Verso, Penguin / Random House, 2011.

URL = https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/232940/citizens-to-lords-by-ellen-meiksins-wood/9781844677061/


Description

"In this groundbreaking work, Ellen Meiksins Wood rewrites the history of political theory. She traces the development of the Western tradition from classical antiquity through to the Middle Ages in the perspective of social history—a significant departure not only from the standard abstract history of ideas but also from other contextual methods.

Treating canonical thinkers as passionately engaged human beings, Wood examines their ideas not simply in the context of political languages but as creative responses to the social relations and conflicts of their time and place. She identifies a distinctive relation between property and state in Western history and shows how the canon, while largely the work of members or clients of dominant classes, was shaped by complex interactions among proprietors, labourers and states. Western political theory, Wood argues, owes much of its vigour, and also many ambiguities, to these complex and often contradictory relations."


More information