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Rebuilding Babel

Cultural, Economic and Political Integration in the World

Friday, 26 June 2009

History of France - 1871-2009

Videos of another fascinating course from Yale University
History of France - 1871-2009
1. Introduction
2. The Paris Commune and its Legacy
3. Centralized State and Republic
4. A Nation_ Peasants, Language and the French Idenitity
5. Workshop and Factory
6. The Waning of Religious Authority
7. Mass Politics and the Political Challenge from the Left
8. Dynamite Club: The Anarchists
9.General Boulanger and Captain Dreyfus
10.Cafés and the Culture of Drink
11. Paris and the Belle Époque
12. French Imperialism (Guest Lecture by Charles Keith)
13. The origins of World War I
14. Trench Warfare
15. The Home Front
16. The Great War, Grief and Memory (Guest Lecture by Bruno Cabanes)
17. The Popular Front
18. The Dark Years: Vichy France
19. Resistance
20. Battles for and Against Americanization
21. Vietnam and Algeria
22. Charles De Gaulle
23. May 1968
24. Immigration
Posted by Filipe Albuquerque at 21:58
Labels: France, History, History of France, Yale University Courses Online Videos

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About this blog

For lack of a better place, I use this blog to write down some ideas about current events and as a forum to use in order to keep in touch with friends. I use it as a record of what happened, how I looked at it, what I inferred would happen and what my friends made of all this. I also hope that this blog will help me understand some of the complexities of an increasingly economically integrated world, the need for global governance and whether the EU is a desirable model. This is why it's called rebuilding Babel, as a reminder to put things into a larger perspective, and see what can be done and what is being done to bridge the gaps between cultures, societies and polities. Obviously the blog is not restricted to Europe, and the EU is just a model, as I hoped the title would imply.

The main idea was for me to use this as a way to ventilate my thoughts so that they wouldn't take over my conversations with the rest of the world. Thinking I would not appreciate to be exposed to extensive and unrequested verbosity, I decided it was only fair to save others from mine. The result is this blog: an outlet for my (and your) restlessness and a channel for these thoughts, that does not arbitrarily and constantly annoy other uninterested people.

... it's therapeutical that way!

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