[1]
A. Rupert Hall 1983. New Systems Scientific of Thought in the Seventeenth Century. The revolution in science 1500-1750. Longman. 176–208.
[2]
Ahmad Khan, S. 2011. A voyage to modernism. Primus Books.
[3]
Alan M. Kraut 2010. Immigration, Ethnicity, and the Pandemic. Public Health Reports. 125, Suppl 3 (2010).
[4]
Alex Owen 2001. Occultism and the ‘Modern’ Self in Fin-de-siècle Britain. Meanings of modernity: Britain from the late Victorian era to World War II. Berg.
[5]
Anderson, B.R.O. 2006. Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. Verso.
[6]
Andrew Vincent Nationalism. The Oxford Handbook of Political Ideologies.
[7]
Anne Hardy 1993. Typhoid. The epidemic streets: infectious disease and the rise of preventive medicine, 1856-1900. Clarendon Press.
[8]
Ayesha Jalal 2002. Negotiating Colonial Modernity and Cultural Difference: Indian Muslim Conceptions of Community and Nation, c. 1878-1914. Modernity and culture: from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean. Columbia University Press.
[9]
Bayly, C.A. 2004. The birth of the modern world, 1780-1914: global connections and comparisons. Blackwell.
[10]
Bertens, J.W. 1995. The idea of the postmodern: a history. Routledge.
[11]
Björn Wittrock 1998. Early Modernities: Varieties and Transitions. Daedalus. 127, 3 (1998), 19–40.
[12]
Björn Wittrock 2000. Modernity: One, None, or Many? European Origins and Modernity as a Global Condition. Daedalus. 129, 1 (2000), 31–60.
[13]
Breuilly, J. 1993. Nationalism and the state. Manchester University Press.
[14]
Breuilly, J. 2013. The Oxford handbook of the history of nationalism. Oxford University Press.
[15]
Carl E. Schorske 1978. Generational Tension and Cultural Change: Reflections on the Case of Vienna. Daedalus. 107, 4 (1978), 111–122.
[16]
Christopher Hamlin 1988. Muddling in Bumbledom: On the Enormity of Large Sanitary Improvements in Four British Towns, 1855-1885. Victorian Studies. 32, 1 (1988), 55–83.
[17]
Clay McShane 1994. Chapter 6, The Emergence of the Internal Combustion Automobile: An Urban Phenomenon’. Down the asphalt path: the automobile and the American city. Columbia University Press.
[18]
Clay McShane and Joel A. Tarr 2007. Epilogue, ‘The Horse, the Car and the City’. The horse in the city: living machines in the nineteenth century. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[19]
Cooper, F. 2005. Chapter 5, ‘Modernity’,. Colonialism in question: theory, knowledge, history. University of California Press.
[20]
Cooper, F. 2005. Chapter 5, ‘Modernity’,. Colonialism in question: theory, knowledge, history. University of California Press.
[21]
Copenhaver, B.P. 2015. Magic in Western culture: from antiquity to the enlightenment. Cambridge University Press.
[22]
CR: The New Centennial Review, Volume 2 - Table of Contents: http://ezproxy.lib.le.ac.uk/login?url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/new_centennial_review/toc/ncr2.1.html.
[23]
Crook, T. 2016. Governing systems: modernity and the making of public health in England, 1830-1910. University of California Press.
[24]
Daniel Brewer 2014. The Enlightenment Today. The Cambridge Companion to the French Enlightenment. D. Brewer, ed. Cambridge University Press.
[25]
David Cannadine 1984. The Present and the Past in the English Industrial Revolution 1880-1980. Past & Present. 103 (1984), 131–172.
[26]
David Goodman 1993. Postmodernism and History. American Studies International. 31, 2 (1993), 17–23.
[27]
Dorothy Porter 2002. The Healthy Body. Companion encyclopedia of medicine in the twentieth century. Routledge.
[28]
Dwork, D. 1981. Health conditions of immigrant Jews on the Lower East Side of New York: 1880–1914. Medical History. 25, 01 (Jan. 1981), 1–40. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025727300034086.
[29]
Edited by Jerry H. Bentley Modernity. The Oxford Handbook of World History.
[30]
Eileen Janes Yeo 2003. Social Surveys in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. The Cambridge History of Science. T.M. Porter and D. Ross, eds. Cambridge University Press.
[31]
Engels, F. and ebrary, Inc 2000. Condition of the Working Class in England. ElecBook.
[32]
Freeman, J.B. 2018. Behemoth: a history of the factory and the making of the modern world. W.W. Norton & Company.
[33]
Fritz Stern 1974. Introduction. The politics of cultural despair: a study in the rise of the Germanic ideology. University of California Press.
[34]
Gellner, E. and Breuilly, J. 2006. Nations and nationalism. Blackwell.
[35]
Gerry Kearns 1988. Private property and public health reform in England 1830-70. Social science & medicine. 26, (1988).
[36]
Gerrylynn Roberts and Philip Steadman 1999. Chapter 2, ‘Transport and the Nineteenth-Century City’. American cities & technology: wilderness to wired city. Routledge in association with Open University.
[37]
Giddens, A. 2008. Modernity and self-identity: self and society in the late modern age. Polity.
[38]
Griffin, E. 2013. Liberty’s Dawn: A People’s History of the Industrial Revolution. Yale University Press.
[39]
Grosby, Steven 2005. Nationalism : A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press, UK.
[40]
Gunn, S. 2000. The public culture of the Victorian middle class: ritual and authority and the English industrial city, 1840-1914. Manchester University Press.
[41]
H. Stuart Hughes 1974. The Decade of the 1890s: The Revolt against Positivism. Consciousness and society: the reorientation of European social thought 1890-1930. Paladin.
[42]
Harvey, D. 1989. The condition of postmodernity: an enquiry into the origins of cultural change. Basil Blackwell.
[43]
Hobsbawm, E.J. 1975. The age of capital, 1848-1875. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
[44]
Hobsbawm, E.J. 2000. The age of revolution, 1789-1848. Phoenix Press.
[45]
Hopkins, E. 2013. Industrialisation and Society: A Social History, 1830-1951. Taylor and Francis.
[46]
Hutchinson, J. and Smith, A.D. 1994. Nationalism. Oxford University Press.
[47]
Iggers, G.G. 2005. Historiography in the twentieth century: from scientific objectivity to the postmodern challenge ; with a new epilogue by the author. Wesleyan University Press.
[48]
J. Kellett 1969. The impact of railways on Victorian cities, Chapter 1. The impact of railways on Victorian cities. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
[49]
J. R. Milton 2008. Laws of Nature. The Cambridge history of seventeenth-century philosophy: Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press.
[50]
Jane Humphries 2004. Chapter 9 - Household economy. The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Britain: Industrialisation, 1700-1860. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press.
[51]
Johan Heilbron 2008. Social Thought and Natural Science. The Cambridge history of science: Vol. 7: The modern social sciences. Cambridge University Press.
[52]
John Armstrong 2008. From Shillibeer to Buchanan: Transport and the Urban Environment. The Cambridge urban history of Britain: Vol. 3: 1840-1950. Cambridge University Press.
[53]
John Barry 2005. Section VI: The Pestilence. The great influenza: the story of the deadliest pandemic in history. Penguin Books.
[54]
John Duffy 1978. Social Impact of Disease in the Late Nineteenth Century. Sickness and health in America: readings in the history of medicine and public health. University of Wisconsin Press.
[55]
Joyce, P. 1994. Democratic subjects: the self and the social in nineteenth-century England. Cambridge University Press.
[56]
Judith Walzer Leavitt 1992. ‘Typhoid Mary’ Strikes Back Bacteriological Theory and Practice in Early Twentieth-Century Public Health. Isis. 83, 4 (1992), 608–629.
[57]
Jürgen Heideking 2000. The Pattern of American Modernity from the Revolution to the Civil War. Daedalus. 129, 1 (2000), 219–247.
[58]
Kirsty Duncan 2003. The Spanish Influenza of 1918. Hunting the 1918 flu: one scientist’s search for a killer virus. University of Toronto Press.
[59]
Klaus P. Fischer 1995. The Origins of Totalitarianism: The European Background. Nazi Germany: a new history. Constable.
[60]
Leavitt, Judith W. 1996. Healthiest City : Milwaukee and the Politics of Health Reform. University of Wisconsin Press.
[61]
Leavitt, J.W. 1980. The Wasteland: Garbage and Sanitary Reform in the Nineteenth-Century American City. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. XXXV, 4 (1980), 431–452. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/jhmas/XXXV.4.431.
[62]
Lee, L.O. 1999. Chapter One. Shanghai modern: the flowering of a new urban culture in China, 1930-1945. Harvard University Press.
[63]
Louis Châtellier 2008. Christianity and the rise of science, 1660–1815. The Cambridge history of Christianity: Vol. 7: Enlightenment, reawakening, and revolution, 1660-1815. Cambridge University Press.
[64]
LYNN M. THOMAS 2011. Modernity’s Failings, Political Claims, and Intermediate Concepts. The American Historical Review. 116, 3 (2011), 727–740.
[65]
Lyotard, J.-F. 1984. The postmodern condition: a report on knowledge. Manchester University Press.
[66]
Martha A. Sandweiss 2007. Image and Artifact: The Photograph as Evidence in the Digital Age. The Journal of American History. 94, 1 (2007), 193–202.
[67]
Martin Melosi 2000. On the Cusp of the New Public Health: Bacteriology, Environmental Sanitation, and the Quest for Permanence. The sanitary city: urban infrastructure in America from colonial times to the present. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[68]
Mascuch, M. 1997. Origins of the individualist self: autobiography and self-identity in England, 1591-1791. Polity Press.
[69]
Maxine Berg 2004. Chapter 13 - Consumption in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain. The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Britain: Industrialisation, 1700-1860. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press.
[70]
Mechanical Philosophy: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3424300461.html.
[71]
Michael Saler 2003. ‘Clap If You Believe in Sherlock Holmes’: Mass Culture and the Re-Enchantment of Modernity, c. 1890-c. 1940. The Historical Journal. 46, 3 (2003), 599–622.
[72]
Michael T. Saler 2004. Modernity, Disenchantment and the Ironic Imagination. Philosophy and Literature. 28, (2004).
[73]
Michael Saler 2006. Modernity and Enchantment: A Historiographic Review. The American Historical Review. 111, 3 (2006), 692–716.
[74]
Miller, N. and SpringerLink (Online service) 2008. Reinventing Modernity in Latin America: Intellectuals Imagine the Future, 1900-1930. Palgrave Macmillan US.
[75]
Osterhammel, J. and Camiller, P. 2014. The Transformation of the World: A Global History of the Nineteenth Century. Princeton University Press.
[76]
Owen, A. 2004. The place of enchantment: British occultism and the culture of the modern. University of Chicago Press.
[77]
Pat Hudson 2004. Chapter 2  - Industrial organisation and structure. The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Britain: Industrialisation, 1700-1860. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press.
[78]
Peter Burke 2008. Religion and Secularisation. The new Cambridge modern history: 13: Companion volume. Cambridge University Press.
[79]
Peter D. Norton 2007. Street Rivals: Jaywalking and the Invention of the Motor Age Street. Technology and Culture. 48, 2 (2007), 331–359.
[80]
Peter M. Heimann 2008. The Scientific Revolutions. The new Cambridge modern history: 13: Companion volume. Cambridge University Press.
[81]
R. C. Allen 2009. Why was the Industrial Revolution British? Oxonomics. 4, 1 (2009).
[82]
Review by:              Karol Berger                          ,                      Jill Campbell                          ,                      Don Herzog 2006. Review: On Dror Wahrman’s ‘The Making of the Modern Self: Identity and Culture in Eighteenth-Century England’. Eighteenth-Century Studies. 40, 1 (2006), 149–156.
[83]
Richard S. Westfall 1971. The Mechanical Philosophy. The construction of modern science: mechanisms and mechanics. Wiley.
[84]
Rivka Feldhay 2008. Religion. The Cambridge history of science: Vol. 3: Early modern science. Cambridge University Press.
[85]
Robert Brown 2008. Social Sciences. Cambridge history of eighteenth-century philosophy. Cambridge University Press. 1069–1106.
[86]
Rose, N. 1997. Assembling the Modern Self. Rewriting the self: histories from the Renaissance to the present. Routledge.
[87]
S. N. Eisenstadt 2000. Multiple Modernities. Daedalus. 129, 1 (2000), 1–29.
[88]
Sanjay Subrahmanyam 1997. Connected Histories: Notes towards a Reconfiguration of Early Modern Eurasia. Modern Asian Studies. 31, 3 (1997), 735–762.
[89]
Sato, B. 2003. Chapter One. The new Japanese woman: modernity, media, and women in interwar Japan. Duke University Press.
[90]
Schein, R.H. 1993. Representing urban America: 19th-century views of landscape, space, and power. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 11, 1 (1993), 7–21. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1068/d110007.
[91]
Schlichting, K.C. 2001. Grand Central Terminal: railroads, engineering, and architecture in New York City. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[92]
Sennett, R. 2002. The fall of public man. Penguin.
[93]
Shapin, S. 1996. The scientific revolution. University of Chicago Press.
[94]
Shapin, S. 1996. The scientific revolution. University of Chicago Press.
[95]
Shirin S. Deylami 2011. In the Face of the Machine: Westoxification, Cultural Globalization, and the Making of an Alternative Global Modernity. Polity. 43, 2 (2011), 242–263.
[96]
Shulamit Volkov 1978. Popular Antimodernism. The rise of popular antimodernism in Germany: the urban master artisans, 1873-1896. Princeton University Press.
[97]
Smith, A.D. 1998. Nationalism and modernism: a critical survey of recent theories of nations and nationalism. Routledge.
[98]
Smith’s, A.D. 1996. Opening statement Nations and their pasts. Nations and Nationalism. 2, 3 (Nov. 1996), 358–365. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8219.1996.tb00002.x.
[99]
Stephen Broadberry and Bishnupriya Gupta 2006. The Early Modern Great Divergence: Wages, Prices and Economic Development in Europe and Asia, 1500-1800. The Economic History Review. 59, 1 (2006), 2–31.
[100]
T. J. Jackson Lears 1981. Roots of Antimodernism: The Crisis of Cultural Authority During the Late Ninteenth Century. No place of grace: antimodernism and the transformation of American culture 1880-1920. Pantheon Books.
[101]
Taylor, C. 2007. A secular age. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
[102]
Theodore M. Porter 2008. Genres and Objects of Social Inquiry: From the Enlightenment to 1890. The Cambridge history of science: Vol. 7: The modern social sciences. Cambridge University Press.
[103]
Tu Weiming 2000. Implications of the Rise of ‘Confucian’ East Asia. Daedalus. 129, 1 (2000), 195–218.
[104]
Wagner, P. 2012. Modernity: understanding the present. Polity.
[105]
William Outhwaite 2008. Social Thought and Social Science. The new Cambridge modern history: 13: Companion volume. Cambridge University Press.
[106]
Williams, R. 2014. Keywords: a vocabulary of culture and society. Oxford University Press.
[107]
Wrigley, E.A. 2004. Poverty, progress, and population. Cambridge University Press.
[108]
2014. Shaping Modern Britain, Section 1, Eric Evans. Taylor and Francis.
[109]
Urban famine or urban crisis? Typhus in the Victorian city. Medical History. 32, 4.