UCLA history professor
Berend (Decades of Crisis: Central and Eastern Europe before World War II)
succeeds in capturing the common as well as the diverse features of the parts
of a notoriously complex region during the period from the outbreak of the French
Revolution in 1789 to the start of WWI. Berend has made the smart decision to
organize his book topically: individual chapters cover economics, politics and
culture, but he hews closely to the field in which he first made his mark, economic
history. The opening chapter provides an effective synthesis on the origins of
backwardness in the region, from the "second serfdom" in the Baltic
region to Ottoman domination in the Balkans. But Berend also demonstrates that
Balkan societies were themselves resistant to the modernizing impulses coming
from the West. Perhaps surprisingly for an economic historian, the author is equally
good at covering cultural and political developments, especially the grand appeal
of romantic nationalism. By showing how modernized, literary languages were reformed
and even invented by nationalist intellectuals, Berend sides with those scholars
who believe in the "constructed" nature of ethnic and national identities.
Yet he is also keenly aware that nationalism developed upon preexisting religious
and regional identities. The later chapters depict the belated, and incomplete,
industrialization and the conflicts between democratic and authoritarian politics.
Berend's prose is always clear if not exactly inspired. For those readers looking
for a sober, effective historical synthesis on a very complicated region, this
is a good place to start. 97 b&w photos, 2 maps.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.