Revenants of the German Empire: Colonial Germans, Imperialism, and the League of Nations
Autor Sean Andrew Wempeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 iul 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190907211
ISBN-10: 0190907215
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 234 x 157 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190907215
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 234 x 157 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Lucidly written... Revenants of the German Empire is unquestionably a notable addition to the growing scholarship on interwar liberal imperialism, the League of Nations, and the German colonial legacy that will invigorate debates about the continuities and ruptures in Germany's colonial past.
"[A] well-written, nuanced examination of a unique German national identity... This excellent book puts the lives and actions of colonial Germans in the 1920s center stage.
Revenants of the German Empire offers important insights on the multi-faceted legacy of liberal imperialism and internationalism after World War I. Wempe's command of the archival sources and ability to give voice to a previously little-known network of former German colonists is a testament to the strength of his historiographical contribution.
Well-written and highly informative... no one took empires more seriously than the imperialists on the ground.... Wempe has given us a fine and dispassionate portrait of just what made them tick.
This timely and meticulously researched book based on a wide array of archival material masterfully embarks on the interaction of "colonial Germans" with their "fallen empire" after the Treaty of Versailles and how they came to terms with their new roles in practicing imperialism without an empire. By stressing imperially-based notions of "Europeanness" it is truly revisionist. Written with exemplary lucidity and thoroughness it shows that the German colonial past rightly claims more than just a niche chapter in the history of European expansionism. By contrast it provides fascinating theoretical and methodological tools for widening our understanding of individuals' lives in shaping the peculiarities of European colonial empires.
Inter-war, colonial historians and German studies experts have been waiting for a study that examines Weimar colonialism. This book is at the cutting edge of present day scholarship. It is part of a wider endeavor to re-examine the interwar years and networks of internationalism, and brings all of us that extra step further.
This book situates the understudied case of postcolonial Germany in the recent historiographical literature on the League of Nations - well-written, thoughtfully framed, and full of fresh information.
Germany after empire is still largely uncharted terrain. But when Germany's colonial empire fell in 1918, this did not spell the end of German imperialism. As Sean Wempe shows in this fascinating and richly documented study, returning officials, missionaries, and settlers used the League of Nations to insert themselves into the new imperialism of the interwar period that flourished even in the absence of formal colonies
A fascinating work that deals expertly with an important period of change in German understandings of empire.
The end of World War I meant the dismantling of Germany's overseas empire, but it did not mean the end of colonialist politics. Revenants of the German Empire narrates a new history of German colonialists' disparate efforts to lay claim to Germany's colonial past and to articulate colonial futures. Wempe's distinctive research shows that Germany's early decolonizing experience under the purview of the League of Nations belongs front and center in understanding later European decolonization processes.
"[A] well-written, nuanced examination of a unique German national identity... This excellent book puts the lives and actions of colonial Germans in the 1920s center stage.
Revenants of the German Empire offers important insights on the multi-faceted legacy of liberal imperialism and internationalism after World War I. Wempe's command of the archival sources and ability to give voice to a previously little-known network of former German colonists is a testament to the strength of his historiographical contribution.
Well-written and highly informative... no one took empires more seriously than the imperialists on the ground.... Wempe has given us a fine and dispassionate portrait of just what made them tick.
This timely and meticulously researched book based on a wide array of archival material masterfully embarks on the interaction of "colonial Germans" with their "fallen empire" after the Treaty of Versailles and how they came to terms with their new roles in practicing imperialism without an empire. By stressing imperially-based notions of "Europeanness" it is truly revisionist. Written with exemplary lucidity and thoroughness it shows that the German colonial past rightly claims more than just a niche chapter in the history of European expansionism. By contrast it provides fascinating theoretical and methodological tools for widening our understanding of individuals' lives in shaping the peculiarities of European colonial empires.
Inter-war, colonial historians and German studies experts have been waiting for a study that examines Weimar colonialism. This book is at the cutting edge of present day scholarship. It is part of a wider endeavor to re-examine the interwar years and networks of internationalism, and brings all of us that extra step further.
This book situates the understudied case of postcolonial Germany in the recent historiographical literature on the League of Nations - well-written, thoughtfully framed, and full of fresh information.
Germany after empire is still largely uncharted terrain. But when Germany's colonial empire fell in 1918, this did not spell the end of German imperialism. As Sean Wempe shows in this fascinating and richly documented study, returning officials, missionaries, and settlers used the League of Nations to insert themselves into the new imperialism of the interwar period that flourished even in the absence of formal colonies
A fascinating work that deals expertly with an important period of change in German understandings of empire.
The end of World War I meant the dismantling of Germany's overseas empire, but it did not mean the end of colonialist politics. Revenants of the German Empire narrates a new history of German colonialists' disparate efforts to lay claim to Germany's colonial past and to articulate colonial futures. Wempe's distinctive research shows that Germany's early decolonizing experience under the purview of the League of Nations belongs front and center in understanding later European decolonization processes.
Notă biografică
Sean Wempe is Assistant Professor of Modern European History, California State University--Bakersfield.