The Trauma of Defeat: Ricarda Huch's Historiography during the Weimar Republic
This is the first book-length study to consider Ricarda Huch's historical-political thought and assess Huch's place within the lively historiographical discourses of the 1920s. One of the most famous writers of her day, Huch (1864-1947) was known for her poetry, fiction, and histories of German Romanticism and the Thirty Years' War. Like many of her generation Huch was shaken by Germany's defeat in the First World War, and this shock motivated her to use her historiography to address Germany's post-war situation. Convinced that the German nation possessed an identity best expressed by the ideals of Romanticism, Huch attributed Germany's decline to the westernization of German political culture; absolutism and centralization had replaced the theoretical perfection of the decentralized early Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. Her Weimar histories of medieval and nineteenth-century Germany urged a defeated and traumatized nation to return to a path that had been abandoned during the Wilhelmine Empire. Topics explored include Huch's use of Nietzschean monumentalism, a comparison with popular historians of the period (e.g. E. Kantorowicz), the echoes of her political thought in her poetry and fiction, and her complex relationship to German nationalism.
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The Trauma of Defeat: Ricarda Huch's Historiography during the Weimar Republic
This is the first book-length study to consider Ricarda Huch's historical-political thought and assess Huch's place within the lively historiographical discourses of the 1920s. One of the most famous writers of her day, Huch (1864-1947) was known for her poetry, fiction, and histories of German Romanticism and the Thirty Years' War. Like many of her generation Huch was shaken by Germany's defeat in the First World War, and this shock motivated her to use her historiography to address Germany's post-war situation. Convinced that the German nation possessed an identity best expressed by the ideals of Romanticism, Huch attributed Germany's decline to the westernization of German political culture; absolutism and centralization had replaced the theoretical perfection of the decentralized early Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. Her Weimar histories of medieval and nineteenth-century Germany urged a defeated and traumatized nation to return to a path that had been abandoned during the Wilhelmine Empire. Topics explored include Huch's use of Nietzschean monumentalism, a comparison with popular historians of the period (e.g. E. Kantorowicz), the echoes of her political thought in her poetry and fiction, and her complex relationship to German nationalism.
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The Trauma of Defeat: Ricarda Huch's Historiography during the Weimar Republic

The Trauma of Defeat: Ricarda Huch's Historiography during the Weimar Republic

by James M. Skidmore
The Trauma of Defeat: Ricarda Huch's Historiography during the Weimar Republic

The Trauma of Defeat: Ricarda Huch's Historiography during the Weimar Republic

by James M. Skidmore

Paperback

$123.75 
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Overview

This is the first book-length study to consider Ricarda Huch's historical-political thought and assess Huch's place within the lively historiographical discourses of the 1920s. One of the most famous writers of her day, Huch (1864-1947) was known for her poetry, fiction, and histories of German Romanticism and the Thirty Years' War. Like many of her generation Huch was shaken by Germany's defeat in the First World War, and this shock motivated her to use her historiography to address Germany's post-war situation. Convinced that the German nation possessed an identity best expressed by the ideals of Romanticism, Huch attributed Germany's decline to the westernization of German political culture; absolutism and centralization had replaced the theoretical perfection of the decentralized early Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. Her Weimar histories of medieval and nineteenth-century Germany urged a defeated and traumatized nation to return to a path that had been abandoned during the Wilhelmine Empire. Topics explored include Huch's use of Nietzschean monumentalism, a comparison with popular historians of the period (e.g. E. Kantorowicz), the echoes of her political thought in her poetry and fiction, and her complex relationship to German nationalism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783039107605
Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 07/12/2005
Series: Kanadische Studien zur deutschen Sprache und Literatur: Etudes canadiennes de langue et littérature allemandes , #50
Pages: 222
Product dimensions: 5.91(w) x 8.66(h) x (d)

About the Author

The Author: James M. Skidmore studied French and German at the University of Saskatchewan and received his Ph.D. in German from Princeton University. He is Associate Professor of German Studies at the University of Waterloo. He has published on R. Huch, German film, and 20th-century German literature and culture.

Table of Contents

Contents: Ricarda Huch’s War – Romantic Thought/Neo-Romantic History – Weimar, Weltanschauung, and History – Huch’s Monumentalism – Huch and the Historiography of Weimar.
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