This is a wide-ranging intellectual history of how, in the 18th century,
Europe came to be conceived as divided into "Western Europe" and
"Eastern Europe". The author argues that this conceptual reorientation
from the previously accepted "Northern" and "Southern" was a work of
cultural construction and intellectual artifice created by the
philosophes of the Enlightenment. He shows how the philosophers viewed
the continent from the perspective of Paris and deliberately cultivated
an idea of the backwardness of "Eastern Europe" the more readily to
affirm the importance of "Western Europe".