9780198898207-0198898207-Living the German Revolution, 1918-19: Expectations, Experiences, Responses (Studies of the German Historical Institute, London)

Living the German Revolution, 1918-19: Expectations, Experiences, Responses (Studies of the German Historical Institute, London)

ISBN-13: 9780198898207
ISBN-10: 0198898207
Author: Christopher Dillon, Kim Wünschmann
Publication date: 2024
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardcover 380 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780198898207
ISBN-10: 0198898207
Author: Christopher Dillon, Kim Wünschmann
Publication date: 2024
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardcover 380 pages

Summary

Living the German Revolution, 1918-19: Expectations, Experiences, Responses (Studies of the German Historical Institute, London) (ISBN-13: 9780198898207 and ISBN-10: 0198898207), written by authors Christopher Dillon, Kim Wünschmann, was published by Oxford University Press in 2024. With an overall rating of 4.4 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Living the German Revolution, 1918-19: Expectations, Experiences, Responses (Studies of the German Historical Institute, London) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $2.05.

Description

The German Revolution of 1918-19 marks a historical turning point at which, following the catastrophe of the Great War, soldiers and civilians rose up to overthrow the German Empire's political and military leadership. The prospect of radical change evoked diverse hopes and fears in Germans young and old, female and male, rural and urban, Catholic, Protestant and Jewish. The essays in this volume, which are all based on fresh archival research, analyse their various expectations, experiences, and responses towards the revolution. Whereas much of the existing scholarship concentrates on the high politics and institutional contests of the revolution, these essays are concerned with revolutionary culture and subjectivities. They seek to historicize the revolution not so much from above, or from below, but from within, as a lived and open-ended civic experiment. This volume's cast of protagonists encompasses sailors mobilizing in north German naval bases, women storming town halls in
provincial Bavaria, youngsters pounding Hamburg dance floors on wintery evenings, factory workers savouring the new eight-hour day, publishers grappling with shifting readerships, theologians debating constitutional arrangements, and journalists writing to make sense of a world seemingly turned upside down. The essays explore how the German Revolution unleashed the political imagination of a newly empowered citizenry. Their collective contention is that this socio-cultural approach best registers the revolution's popular mobilization and societal penetration, its destruction of inherited patterns of authority, and, ultimately, its complex and contested legacy for the Weimar republican project.

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