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Informationen zum Autor Matthew Jefferies is Senior Lecturer in German History at the University of Manchester. He is the author of Imperial Culture in Germany, 1871-1918 (2003) and Politics and Culture in Wilhelmine Germany (1995). Klappentext Over recent decades much has been written on the complexities of Imperial Germany. More is known today about the politics, society, economy and culture of the German Empire than ever before. However, the sheer volume of new scholarship makes it increasingly challenging to synthesize all the available information.This book provides an up-to-date and accessible guide to the diversity of current thinking about the German Empire, from unification in 1871 to collapse by the end of the First World War. It offers a historiographical overview, spanning more than a century of research and writing on the subject. Matthew Jefferies guides readers through the main schools of thought and approaches, and provides pointers for future developments in the field. The controversial historical reputations of Bismarck and Kaiser Wilhelm II are explored, as are varying perspectives on gender, cultural history, foreign relations, colonialism, and war.Written in clear and concise language, Contesting The German Empire reflects the wide range of opinions on Imperial Germany held by historians today. Zusammenfassung Over recent decades much has been written on the complexities of Imperial Germany. More is known today about the politics, society, economy and culture of the German Empire than ever before. However, the sheer volume of new scholarship makes it increasingly challenging to synthesize all the available information. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgements.Introduction.1 The German Empire and its historians.2 Great Men? Bismarck and Kaiser Wilhelm II.3 'Democracy in the undemocratic state?'.4 'Familiar features in an unfamiliar light' Social and cultural perspectives.5 The Kaiserreich transnational? Germany, colonialism, and the First World War.Epilogue: Remembering Imperial German.Bibliography.Index...
List of contents
Acknowledgements.
Introduction.
1 The German Empire and its historians.
2 Great Men? Bismarck and Kaiser Wilhelm II.
3 'Democracy in the undemocratic state?'.
4 'Familiar features in an unfamiliar light' Social and cultural perspectives.
5 The Kaiserreich transnational? Germany, colonialism, and the First World War.
Epilogue: Remembering Imperial German.
Bibliography.
Index
Report
"E xcellently suited for undergraduates developing a critical approach to historiography." ( European History Quarterly , Spring 2010)
"The great merit of the volume is thus to analyze the playing out, if not the full resolution, of these controversies, during the era that has followed German reunification." ( English Historical Review , June 2009)
"Jefferies has produced a balanced, up-to-date book which will be an invaluable study aid for students and academics alike. ... A welcome arrival in so densely researched a field." ( History , April 2009)
"In the past two decades, American, British and German historians have offered fundamentally new perspectives on the trajectory of Imperial Germany, often informed by recent approaches in social and cultural history. What was still needed, therefore, was a companion to the findings of this burgeoning and often controversial literature, a companion that is now available with this very informative and always reliable book by Matthew Jefferies." (History Today)
"A very readable and balanced account of the historiography of the German Empire. He focuses on the historical social science school and its main competitors, from neoconservatism through British neo-Marxism to a variety of cultural approaches." ( CHOICE )