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Title The persistence of race : continuity and change in Germany from the Wilhelmine Empire to national socialism / edited by Lara Day and Oliver Haag
Published New York : Berghahn Books, [2017]
©2017

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Description 1 online resource (vi, 265 pages) : illustrations
Contents Categories: continuous, heterogeneous narratives -- The 'origin of the Germans' -- narratives, academic research, and bad cognitive practice / Ulrich Charpa -- Fantasies of mixture -- politics of purity: narratives of miscegenation in colonial literature, literary primitivism, and theories of race (1900-1933) / Eva Blome -- Blute und Zerfall: 'schematic narrative templates' of decline and fall in volkisch and national socialist racial ideology / Helen Roche -- Germany and internal otherness / Ernst Lissauer -- Advocating deutschtum against cultural narratives of race / Arne Offermanns -- The Jewish CEO and the Lutheran bishop: the impact of German colonial studies on young Jewish and Christian academics' cultural narratives of race / Lukas Bormann -- Germany and transnational otherness -- Race and ethnicity in German criminology: on crime rates and the Polish population in the Kaiserreich (1871-1914) / Volker Zimmermann -- Narratives of race, constructions of community and the demand for female participation in German-nationalist movements in Austria and the German Reich / Johanna Gehmacher -- In the crosshairs of degeneracy and race: the Wilhelmine origins of the construction of a national aesthetic and parameters of normalcy in Weimar Germany / Lara Day -- Germany and colonial otherness -- "The white goddess of the masses:" stardom, whiteness and racial masquerade in Weimar popular culture / Pablo Dominguez Andersen -- Idealized Australian aboriginality in German narratives of race / Oliver Haag
Summary Race in 20th-century German history is an inescapable topic, one that has been defined overwhelmingly by the narratives of degeneracy that prefigured the Nuremberg Laws and death camps of the Third Reich. As the contributions to this innovative volume show, however, German society produced a much more complex variety of racial representations over the first part of the century. Here, historians explore the hateful depictions of the Nazi period alongside idealized images of African, Pacific and Australian Indigenous peoples, demonstrating both the remarkable fixity race had as an object of fascination for German society as well as the conceptual plasticity it exhibited through several historical eras
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on November 06, 2017)
Subject Racism -- Germany -- History
Race awareness -- Germany
Imperialism -- Social aspects -- Germany -- History
National socialism.
National Socialism.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Discrimination & Race Relations.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Minority Studies.
HISTORY -- Europe -- Germany.
Imperialism -- Social aspects
Intellectual life
National socialism
Race awareness
Racism
SUBJECT Germany -- Intellectual life. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85054607
Subject Germany
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Day, Lara, editor
Haag, Oliver, editor
LC no. 2017034836
ISBN 9781785335952
1785335952