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The German Historians and England

The German Historians and England

The German Historians and England

A Study in Nineteenth-Century Views
Charles E. McLelland, University of Pennsylvania
October 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521083966
$49.99
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Paperback

    Between the late eighteenth century and the eve of World War I, England assumed a special significance for the German intellectual elite. In the beginning, the preponderant admiration for England was intense enough to earn the name Anglomania, but by the turn of the twentieth century German intellectuals had developed an intensely hostile view of everything English, a view which required little exaggeration to provide distorted war propaganda in 1914. Dr McClelland describes and explains the great change in the German view of England in the period when she meant most to German thinkers. In particular he investigates one important group of German intellectuals - the historians and social scientists. These men provide a relatively continuous thread through the development of German thought. Furthermore, the German historians played an especially important role in the elaboration of German civic culture as a result of their great prestige within the universities, their political activism and their political journalism.

    Product details

    October 2008
    Paperback
    9780521083966
    316 pages
    228 × 152 × 17 mm
    0.49kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Introduction:
    • 1. Prologue
    • 2. The eighteenth-century background
    • Part II. The German View of England in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Periods:
    • 3. The challenge of the French Revolution
    • 4. Restoration versus constitutionalism and the German view of England
    • Part III. Anglo-German Fraternity – The Middle Decades:
    • 5. England as older brother – constitutionalism and the British example
    • 6. England as first cousin – Ranke and Protestant-Germanic conservatism
    • 7. England as a sibling rival – outside views
    • 8. England as senescent uncle – Gneiss and the young National Liberals
    • Part IV. The End of Anglophilia:
    • 9. Treitschke and the rejection of England
    • 10. Imperialism and Anglo-German estrangement
    • 11. Epilogue.
      Author
    • Charles E. McLelland , University of Pennsylvania