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Between Yesterday and Tomorrow
(Englisch)
German Visions of Europe, 1926-1950
Bailey, Christian

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Produktbeschreibung

An intellectual and cultural history of mid-twentieth century plans for European integration, this book calls into question the usual pre- and post-war periodizations that have structured approaches to twentieth-century European history. It focuses not simply on the ideas of leading politicians but analyses debates about Europe in "civil society".

Über den Autor

nChristian Bailey is Assistant Professor of History at Purchase College, State University of New York. After having completed his PhD at Yale University, he was appointed Max Kade Fellow at the Free University in Berlin and has worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the History of Emotions Research Center in the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin.


Inhaltsverzeichnis

nAcknowledgements
nAbbreviations

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nIntroduction

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nChapter 1. Making the Case for Europe: Transnational Organizations and Cultural Journals
nChapter 2. The defence of Europe in Merkur: Deutsche Zeitschrift für Europäisches Denken
nChapter 3. The Internationaler Sozialistischer Kampfbund: From World Revolution to European Federalism
nChapter 4. The Rise and Fall of a Socialist Europe: The ISK and the SPD in Opposition
nChapter 5. An island surrounded by land: Das Demokratische Deutschland in Switzerland
nChapter 6. 'Europe our Fatherland, Bavaria our Heimat!' Das Demokratische Deutschland and the Post-War Trajectories of European Federalism

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nConclusions

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nBibliography


Klappentext

"By looking at political and intellectual discourses from a wide array of political perspectives (conservative, Catholic, regional, social democratic), this book makes several important points in discussing various rival conceptions of 'Europes that never happened' but that allowed a diverse array of political groupings to converge on support for European integration. This book will resonate not just with historians but also political scientists and sociologists." · Eric Langenbacher, Georgetown Universitynn"This is a fluently written and clearly argued text, well researched and neatly organized in terms of logical structure and narrative delivery...It is fresh and original, and offers new views of intellectual life in the early years of the fledgling Bonn Republic and will no doubt attract a good amount of attention in the field of post-1945 German and European History." · Paul Betts, University of OxfordnnAn intellectual and cultural history of mid-twentieth century plans for European integration, this book calls into question the usual pre- and post-war periodizations that have structured approaches to twentieth-century European history. It focuses not simply on the ideas of leading politicians but analyses debates about Europe in "civil society" and the party-political sphere in Germany, asking if, and how, a "permissive consensus" was formed around the issue of integration. Taking Germany as its case study, the book offers context to the post-war debates, analysing the continuities that existed between interwar and post-war plans for European integration. It draws attention to the abiding scepticism of democracy displayed by many advocates of integration, indeed suggesting that groups across the ideological spectrum converged around support for European integration as a way of constraining the practice of democracy within nation-states.nnChristian Bailey is a lecturer in history at The Open University and at Balliol College, Oxford. After having completed his PhD at Yale University, he was appointed Max Kade Fellow at the Free University in Berlin and has worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the History of Emotions Research Center in the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin.



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