Fr. 64.00

Germany

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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What is a German''s fatherland?'', asked Ernst Moritz Arndt at the beginning of the nineteenth century. This has arguably been the central question of modern German history. Germans did not have a united fatherland until 1871, and, thereafter, major political events in 1918, 1933, 1945, 1968 and 1989 ensured that the answers to Arndt''s question proliferated and diverged with breath-taking speed. Germany explains the diverse ways in which national identity has been constructed over more than three centuries. It focuses on the plurality of contested definitions of ''Germanness''. The themes covered include the struggles between democratic and non-democratic inventions of the nation, the construction of the racial nation under Nazism, economic definitions of the nation, foreigners and ''Germanness'', the nation as a ''community of memory'', the gendering of the national discourse, the federal nature of German nationalism and the impact of war on the construction of a German national identity. This is a fundamental reappraisal of Germany''s history from a perspective available only now that the dust from the demolished Berlin Wall is settling in a reunited Germany.>

Product details

Authors Stefan Berger
Publisher Bloomsbury Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 25.06.2004
 
EAN 9780340705841
ISBN 978-0-340-70584-1
No. of pages 320
Dimensions 150 mm x 235 mm x 15 mm
Series Inventing the Nation
Inventing the Nation
Subjects Education and learning > Teaching preparation > Vocational needs

Deutschland, 20. Jahrhundert (1900 bis 1999 n. Chr.), Europäische Geschichte, Geschichte allgemein und Weltgeschichte

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