contributors to this issue · contributors to this issue friederike brÜhÖfener is assistant...
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Contributors to This Issue
FRIEDERIKE BRÜHÖFENER is assistant professor of history at the University of Texas Rio GrandeValley (Department of History, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, 1201 West UniversityDr., ARHU 346A, Edinburg, Texas 78539; e-mail: [email protected]). Sheis the author of “Sending Young Men to the Barracks: West Germany’s Struggle over theEstablishment of New Armed Forces in the 1950s,” which appeared in 2014 in Gender and theLong Postwar: Reconsiderations of the United States and the Two Germanys, 1945–1989, a collectionedited by Karen Hagemann and Sonya Michel. Her current project, “Defining the WestGerman Soldier: Military, Society, and Masculinity in West Germany, 1945–1989,” exploresthe development and change of military masculinities in the four decades after the end ofWorld War II.
ANN GOLDBERG is professor of history at the University of California, Riverside (Department ofHistory, UCR, Riverside, CA 92521; email: [email protected]). She is the author ofHonor, Politics, and the Law in Imperial Germany, 1871–1914 (2010) and Sex, Religion, and theMaking of Modern Madness (1999). Her article is part of a larger research project on the politicsof hate speech in Germany from the nineteenth century to the present.
ERIC KURLANDER is professor of modern European history at Stetson University (Department ofHistory, Stetson University, 421 North Woodland Blvd., Deland, FL 32723; e-mail: [email protected]). He is the coeditor of Revisiting the “Nazi Occult”: Histories, Realities, Legacies (2015)and Transcultural Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries(2014); and the author of LivingWith Hitler: Liberal Democrats in the Third Reich (2009) and The Priceof Exclusion: Ethnicity, National Identity, and the Decline of German Liberalism, 1898–1933 (2006). Heis currently finishing a book titled, Hitler’s Monsters: A Supernatural History of the Third Reich.
ANNIKA MOMBAUER is senior lecturer in history at The Open University (Department ofHistory, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA, UK; email: [email protected]). Her recent publications include Die Julikrise. Europas Weg in denErstenWeltkrieg (2014) andThe origins of the FirstWorldWar: Diplomatic and military documents (2013).She is currently preparing a revised and updated version of The Origins of the First World War:Controversies and Consensus (2002), to be published in 2016.
HERMANN REBEL is professor emeritus at the University of Arizona (email: [email protected]). His publications includeWhenWomen Held The Dragon’s Tongue and Other Essays in HistoricalAnthropology (2010) and Peasant Classes: The Bureaucratization of Property and Family Relations underEarly Habsburg Absolutism, 1511–1636 (1983). He has written on Austrian and German agrarianand cultural history, and continues to develop the story he first outlined in “Dark Events and
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Lynching Scenes in the Collective Memory: A Dispossession Narrative about Austria’s Descentinto Holocaust,” which appeared in 2001 in Agrarian Studies, a collection edited by James C.Scott and Nina Bhatt. He is also investigating the conceptual assumptions and historical implica-tions of the philosophical anthropology of Arnold Gehlen, Thomas Nipperdey, and othersafter 1950.
JAMES J. SHEEHAN is Dickason Professor in the Humanities and professor of historyemeritus at Stanford University (2742 Benvenue Ave, Berkeley, CA 94705; email: [email protected]). His most recent book, Where Have All the Soldiers Gone? The Transformation ofModern Europe (2008), explores the changing role of war in the twentieth century. He is nowworking on a book tentatively titled “Making a Modern Political Order,” which will be basedon the Dilenschneider lectures that he delivered at the University of Notre Dame in the springof 2015.
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FORTHCOMING
Volume 49 Number 1 2016
ARTICLES
Editing Empire: The Kaiserchronik as History and LiteratureMark Chinca and Christopher J. Young
The Early Eighteenth-century German Confessional Crisis: The Juridification of ReligiousConflict in the Reconfessionalized Politics of the Holy Roman Empire
Patrick Milton
“The Lord Has Done Great Things for Us”: The 1817 Reformation Celebrations and theEnd of the Counter-Reformation in the Habsburg Lands
Scott Berg
Complexity, Contingency, and Coherence in the History of Sexuality in Modern Germany:Some Theoretical and Interpretive Reflections
Edward Ross Dickinson
MEMORIALS
Peter Gay (1923–2015)George S. Williamson
Carl E. Schorkse (1915–2015)John W. Boyer
BOOK REVIEWS
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Author Index for Volume 48, 2015
Aaslestad, Katherine B., 225Allen, Ann Taylor, 121Auslander, Leora, 300
Becker, Bert, 260Black, Peter, 584Blanke, Richard, 255Bowman, William D., 574Brophy, James M., 427Bruce, Gary, 450Brühöfener, Friederike, 523Buse, Dieter K., 434
Caldwell, Peter C., 587Cary, Noel D., 589Ciarlo, David, 258Coen, Deborah R., 267
Davis, Christian S., 268, 578Derman, Joshua, 270Deshmukh, Marion F., 280
Eckert, Astrid M., 140Eghigian, Greg, 429Elder, Sace, 262Eley, Geoff, 100
Feinberg, Melissa, 274Feinstein, Margarete Myers, 275Fink, Carole, 265, 582
Geller, Jay Howard, 444Glassheim, Eagle, 136Goldberg, Ann, 480Gregor, Neil, 271
Hagen, Joshua, 4Hansen, Jason, 591Harrington, Joel F., 115Harvey, Elizabeth, 287Hayes, Peter, 120Hett, Benjamin Carter, 199
Hochstadt, Steve, 123, 437Hopkins, Michael F., 446
Imhoof, David, 139
James, Leighton S., 568Jarausch, Konrad H., 249
Kaplan, Thomas Pegelow, 132Kellenbach, Katharina von, 592Klautke, Egbert, 129Krause, Scott H., 79Kümin, Beat, 566Kurlander, Eric, 432, 498
Lees, Andrew, 137Löw, Andrea, 387Louthan, Howard, 116
Macrakis, Kristie, 128McLellan, Josie, 405McNeely, Ian F., 430Meng, Michael, 277Messenger, David A., 586Mombauer, Annika, 541Moranda, Scott, 278Mouton, Michelle, 53
Nelson, Robert, 441
Perry, Joe, 143Port, Andrew I., 238Prehn, Ulrich, 366Priemel, Kim Christian, 31
Reagin, Nancy, 130Rebel, Hermann, 461Rosenblum, Warren, 126Ross, Anna, 572
Schaefer, Bernd, 142Schilling, Britta, 256Schunka, Alexander, 253
Central European History 48 (2015), 600–601.© Central European History of the American Historical
Association, 2015
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Sheehan, James J., 458, 571Skolnik, Jonathan, 594Slobodian, Quinn, 448Smith, Helmut Walser, 118Soergel, Philip M., 114Steege, Paul, 442Steer, Martina, 176Stimilli, Davide, 124Stone, James, 151
Taschka, Sylvia, 439Tilley, Janette, 252Tompkins, David G., 447
Tooley, T. Hunt, 569
Umbach, Maiken, 287, 335
Waite, Gary K., 424Walther, Daniel J., 577Wilson, Jeffrey K., 575Wiltenburg, Joy, 426Wittmann, Rebecca, 134Wolffram, Heather, 580
Zilberstein, Anya, 565Zwicker, Lisa Fetheringill, 263
AUTHOR INDEX FOR VOLUME 48, 2015 601
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Title Index for Volume 48, 2015
ARTICLES
Between Heimat and Schubsystem: Walkingthe Homeless to Death in Early ModernAustria, Hermann Rebel, 461
Bismarck and the Great Game: Germany andAnglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia,1871–1890, James Stone, 151
Documenting as a “Passion and Obsession”:Photographs from the Lodz (Litzmann-stadt) Ghetto Andrea Löw, 387
From Private Photography to Mass Circula-tion: The Queering of East German VisualCulture, 1968-1989, Josie McLellan, 405
Hate Speech and Identity Politics inGermany, 1848–1914, Ann Goldberg, 480
Introduction: Photography and Twentieth-Century German History, ElizabethHarvey and Maiken Umbach, 287
Missing, Lost, and Displaced Children inPostwar Germany: The Great Struggle toProvide for the War’s Youngest Victims,Michelle Mouton, 53
Nation, Religion, Gender: The TripleChallenge of Middle-Class German-Jewish Women in World War I, MartinaSteer, 176
The Nazi Magicians’ Controversy: Enlight-enment, “Border Science,” and Occultismin the Third Reich, Eric Kurlander, 498
Neue Westpolitik: The Clandestine Cam-paign toWesternize the SPD in ColdWarBerlin, 1948–1958, Scott H. Krause, 79
Occupying Ukraine: Great Expectations,Failed Opportunities, and the Spoils ofWar,1941–1943, Kim Christian Priemel, 31
Reading German Jewry through VernacularPhotography: From the Kaiserreich to theThird Reich, Leora Auslander, 300
Selfhood, Place, and Ideology in GermanPhoto Albums, 1933–1945, MaikenUmbach, 335
Sex and the Soldier: The Discourse about theMoral Conduct of Bundeswehr Soldiersand Officers during the Adenauer Era,Friederike Brühöfener, 523
Shaping Public Opinion throughArchitecture and Urban Design: Perspec-tives on Ludwig I and His BuildingProgram for a “New Munich”, JoshuaHagen, 4
“This Story Is about Something Fundamen-tal”: Nazi Criminals, History, Memory,and the Reichstag Fire, Benjamin CarterHett, 199
Working Photos: Propaganda, Participation,and the Visual Production of Memory inNazi Germany, Ulrich Prehn, 366
REVIEW ESSAYS
Central European History since 1989: His-toriographical Trends and Post-Wende“Turns”, Andrew I. Port, 238
The German Right from Weimar to Hitler:Fragmentation and Coalescence, GeoffEley, 100
Guilt or Responsibility? The Hundred-YearDebate on the Origins of World War I,Annika Mombauer, 541
Serious Work for a New Europe: The Con-gress of Vienna after Two Hundred Years,Katherine B. Aaslestad, 235
FEATURED BOOK REVIEW
Geschichte Deutschlands im 20. Jahrhundert,Konrad H. Jarausch, 249
Central European History 48 (2015), 602–606.© Central European History of the American Historical
Association, 2015
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BOOK REVIEWS
The Afterlife of Austria-Hungary: The Imageof the Habsburg Monarchy in InterwarEurope, Adam Kozuchowski, REVIEWED BY
Deborah R. Coen, 267Allen Dulles, the OSS, and Nazi War Crim-inals: The Dynamics of Selective Prosecu-tion, Kerstin von Lingen, REVIEWED BY
David A. Messenger, 586Architecture, Politics and Identity in DividedBerlin, Emily Pugh, REVIEWED BY MichaelMeng, 277
Arnold Schoenberg’sASurvivor fromWarsawin Postwar Europe, Joy H. Calico,REVIEWED BY Margarete Myers Feinstein,275
August Bebel—Kaiser der Arbeiter. Eine Bio-graphie, Jürgen Schmidt Working-ClassPolitics in the German Revolution: RichardMüller, the Revolutionary Shop Stewards andthe Origins of the Council Movement, RalfHoffrogge, REVIEWED BY Dieter K. Buse,434
Berlin Coquette: Prostitution and the NewGerman Woman, 1890–1933, Jill SuzanneSmith, REVIEWED BY Lisa FetheringillZwicker, 263
Beyond Alterity: German Encounters withModern East Asia, Qinna Shen andMartin Rosenstock, eds., REVIEWED BY BertBecker, 260
Bluestocking Feminism and British-GermanCultural Transfer, 1750–1837, AlessaJohns, REVIEWED BY Joy Wiltenburg, 426
The Business of Waste: Great Britain andGermany, 1945 to the Present, RaymondG. Stokes, Roman Köster, Stephen C.Sambrook, REVIEWED BY Peter C. Cald-well, 587
Cold War Cultures: Perspectives on Easternand Western European Societies, AnnetteVowinckel, Marcus M. Payk, and ThomasLindenberger, eds., REVIEWED BY BerndSchaefer, 142
The Collapse: The Accidental Opening of theBerlin Wall, Mary Elise Sarotte, REVIEWED
BY Gary Bruce, 450
Composing the Party Line: Music and Politics inEarly Cold War Poland and East Germany,David G. Tompkins, REVIEWED BY DavidImhoof, 139
Consumption and Violence: Radical Protest inCold-War West Germany, AlexanderSedlmaier, REVIEWED BYQuinn Slobodian,448
Crime and Criminal Justice in ModernGermany, Richard F. Wetzell, ed.,REVIEWED BY Heather Wolffram, 580
Crime and Punishment in Early ModernGermany, Maria R. Boes, REVIEWED BY JoelF. Harrington, 115
Danubia: A Personal History of HabsburgEurope, Simon Winder, REVIEWED BY
Leighton S. James, 568Dreamland of Humanists: Warburg, Cassirer,Panofsky, and the Hamburg School, Emily J.Levine, REVIEWED BY Davide Stimilli, 124
Emil du Bois-Reymond: Neuroscience, Self,and Society in Nineteenth-CenturyGermany, Gabriel Finkelstein, REVIEWED
BY Ian F. McNeely, 430Encounters with Modernity: The CatholicChurch in Germany, 1945–1975, Benja-min Ziemann, REVIEWED BY Noel D. Cary,589
Envisioning Socialism: Television and the ColdWar in the German Democratic Republic,Heather L. Gumbert, REVIEWED BY ScottMoranda, 278
An Exiled Generation: German and HungarianRefugees of Revolution, 1848–1871,Heléna Tóth, REVIEWED BY Anna Ross,572
German Colonialism in a Global Age, BradleyNaranch and Geoff Eley, eds., REVIEWED
BY Daniel J. Walther, 577German POWs, Der Ruf, and the Genesis ofGroup 47: The Political Journey of AlfredAndersch and Hans Werner Richter, AaronD. Horton, REVIEWED BY Paul Steege, 442
The German Research Foundation,1920–1970: Funding Poised betweenScience and Politics, Mark Walker, KarinOrth, Ulrich Herbert and Rüdiger vom
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Bruch, eds., REVIEWED BY KristieMacrakis, 128
Global Crisis: War, Climate Change & Cata-strophe in the Seventeenth Century, GeoffreyParker, REVIEWED BYAnya Zilberstein, 565
Goodbye to All That? The Story of Europe since1945, Dan Stone, REVIEWED BY MelissaFeinberg, 274
Hi Hitler! How the Nazi Past is Being Nor-malized in Contemporary Culture, GavrielD. Rosenfeld, REVIEWED BY JonathanSkolnik, 594
The Historical Uncanny: Disability, Ethnicity,and the Politics of Holocaust Memory,Susanne C. Knittel, REVIEWED BY
Katharina von Kellenbach,592
Hitler’s First Victims: The Quest for Justice,Timothy W. Ryback, REVIEWED BY SteveHochstadt, 437
The Holocaust in the East: Local Perpetratorsand Soviet Responses, Michael David-Fox,Peter Holquist, Alexander M. Martin,eds., REVIEWED BY Peter Black, 584
The Iron Princess: Amalia Elisabeth and theThirty Years War, Tryntje Helfferich,REVIEWED BY Howard Louthan, 116
Jewish Pasts, German Fictions: History,Memory, and Minority Culture inGermany, 1824–1955, Jonathan Skolnik,REVIEWED BY Christian S. Davis, 268
Journeys into Madness: Mapping Mental Illnessin the Austro-Hungarian Empire, GemmaBlackshaw and Sabine Wieber, eds.,REVIEWED BY Greg Eghigian, 429
Kindred by Choice: Germans and AmericanIndians since 1800, H. Glenn Penny,REVIEWED BY Helmut Walser Smith, 118
Kriegskrankenpflege im Ersten Weltkrieg. DasPflegepersonal der freiwilligen Krankenpflegein den Etappen des deutschen Kaiserreiches,Astrid Stölzle, REVIEWED BY Ann TaylorAllen, 121
Krupp: A History of the Legendary GermanFirm, Harold James, REVIEWED BY PeterHayes, 120
Landscape Imagery, Politics, and Identity in aDivided Germany, 1968–1989, Catherine
Wilkins, REVIEWED BY Marion F. Desh-mukh, 280
Ludwig Camerarius (1573–1651). Eine Bio-graphie, Friedrich Hermann Schubert,REVIEWED BY Philip M. Soergel, 114
Mapping the Germans: Statistical Science,Cartography, and the Visualization of theGerman Nation, 1848–1914, Jason D.Hansen, REVIEWED BY Jeffrey K. Wilson,575
The Mark of Cain: Guilt and Denial in thePost-War Lives of Nazi Perpetrators,Katharina von Kellenbach, REVIEWED BY
Rebecca Wittmann, 134The Merchant Republics: Amsterdam,Antwerp, and Hamburg, 1648–1790, MaryLindemann, REVIEWED BY Beat Kümin,566
Metropolis Berlin 1880–1940, Iain BoydWhyte and David Frisby, eds., REVIEWED
BY Steve Hochstadt, 123Music, Piety, and Propaganda: The Sounds-capes of Counter-Reformation Bavaria,Alexander J. Fisher, REVIEWED BY JanetteTilley, 252
The Nay Science: A History of GermanIndology, Vishwa Adluri and JoydeepBagchee, REVIEWED BY Eric Kurlander, 432
Nazi Germany and the Arab World, Francis R.Nicosia, REVIEWED BY Carole Fink, 582
The New Life: Jewish Students of PostwarGermany, Jeremy Varon, REVIEWED BY JayHoward Geller, 444
Orderly and Humane: The Expulsion of theGermans after the SecondWorld War, R. M.Douglas, REVIEWED BY Eagle Glassheim,136
The People’s Game: Football, State and Societyin East Germany, Alan McDougall,REVIEWED BY Jason Hansen, 591
The People’s Own Landscape: Nature,Tourism, and Dictatorship in East Germany,Scott Moranda, REVIEWED BY Astrid M.Eckert, 140
The Philosophy of Life and Death: LudwigKlages and the Rise of a Nazi Biopolitics,Nitzan Lebovic, REVIEWED BY EgbertKlautke, 129
TITLE INDEX FOR VOLUME 48, 2015604
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Postcolonial Germany: Memories of Empire ina Decolonized Nation, Britta Schilling,REVIEWED BY David Ciarlo, 258
Protestant Cosmopolitanism andDiplomatic Culture: Brandenburg-SwedishRelations in the Seventeenth Century, DanielRiches, REVIEWED BY Alexander Schunka,253
Relationships/Beziehungsgeschichten: Austriaand the United States in the TwentiethCentury, Günter Bischof, REVIEWED BY
Michael F. Hopkins, 446Revisiting Napoleon’s Continental System:Local, Regional and European Experiences,Katherine B. Aaslestad and JohanJoor, eds., REVIEWED BY James J. Sheehan,571
A Scrap of Paper: Breaking and Making Inter-national Law during the Great War, IsabelV. Hull, REVIEWED BY Carole Fink, 265
Secularism and Religion in Nineteenth-CenturyGermany: The Rise of the Fourth Confes-sion, Todd H. Weir, REVIEWED BY WilliamD. Bowman, 574
Selling under the Swastika: Advertising andCommercial Culture in Nazi Germany,Pamela E. Swett, Nancy Reagin, 130
Sex, Freedom, and Power in ImperialGermany, 1880–1914, Edward RossDickinson, REVIEWED BY Sace Elder, 262
Sites of European Antisemitism in the Age ofMass Politics, 1880–1918, Robert Nemesand Daniel Unowsky, eds., REVIEWED BY
Christian S. Davis, 578Smolensk under the Nazis: Everyday Life inOccupied Russia, Laurie R. Cohen,REVIEWED BY Robert Nelson, 441
Sociology & Empire: The Imperial Entangle-ments of a Discipline, George Steinmetz,ed., REVIEWED BY Britta Schilling, 256
Theater und Öffentlichkeit im Vormärz. Berlin,München und Wien als Schauplätze bürgerli-cher Medienpraxis, Meike Wagner,REVIEWED BY James M. Brophy, 427
Trieglaff: Balancing Church and Politics in aPomeranian World, 1807–1948, Rudolf
von Thadden, REVIEWED BY RichardBlanke, 255
Turning Prayers into Protests:Religious-Based Activism and its Challengeto State Power in Socialist Slovakia and EastGermany, David Doellinger, REVIEWED BY
David G. Tompkins, 447Understanding Multiculturalism: The Habs-burg Central European Experience,Johannes Feichtinger and Gary B.Cohen, eds., REVIEWED BY T. HuntTooley, 569
Visions of Community in Nazi Germany:Social Engineering and Private Lives,Martina Steber and Bernhard Gotto, eds.,REVIEWED BY Neil Gregor, 271
Walter Benjamin: A Critical Life, HowardEiland and Michael W. Jennings,REVIEWED BY Joshua Derman, 270
War of Words: Culture and the Mass Media inthe Making of the Cold War in Europe,Judith Devlin and ChristophHendrik Müller, eds., REVIEWED BY
Joe Perry, 143Weimar Thought: A Contested Legacy,Peter E. Gordon and John P. McCor-mick, eds., REVIEWED BY Warren Rosen-blum, 126
Widerstand und Auswärtiges Amt. Diplomatengegen Hitler, Jan Erik Schulte and MichaelWala, eds., REVIEWED BY Sylvia Taschka,439
Wiederaufbau europäischer Städte/RebuildingEuropean Cities: Rekonstruktionen, dieModerne und die lokale Identitätspolitikseit 1945/Reconstructions, Modernityand the Local Politics of Identity Con-struction since 1945, Georg Wagner-Kyora, ed., REVIEWED BY Andrew Lees,137
Women and the Counter-Reformation inEarly Modern Münster, Simone Laqua-O’Donnell, REVIEWED BY Gary K. Waite,424
AWorld without Jews: The Nazi Imaginationfrom Persecution to Genocide, Alon
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Confino, REVIEWED BY Thomas PegelowKaplan, 132
CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE, 146, 282, 452,597
FORTHCOMING, 148, 283, 454, 599
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR, 1, 149, 285, 455
MEMORIALS
Gerhard A. Ritter (1929–2015) James J.Sheehan, 458
AUTHOR INDEX FOR VOLUME 48, 600
TITLE INDEX FOR VOLUME 48, 602
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Central European History publishes articles, review articles, book reviews, and conference reports dealing with the history of German-speaking central Europe. The journal solicits manuscripts using all approaches to history and dealing with all historical periods. Because space is limited, articles that have been or soon will be published elsewhere are not accepted. Manuscripts submitted to CEH should not be under consideration by another journal pending decision of the editor on publication. If it is learned that an article is under submission to another journal while being considered at CEH, consider-ation will cease immediately. Unsolicited book reviews are not accepted.
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VOLUME 48 | NUMBER 4 | DECEMBER 2015
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Published for the Central European History
Society of the American Historical Association
Cambridge Journals OnlineFor further information about this journal pleasego to the journal web site at:journals.cambridge.org/ccc
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