
- 238 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
German Politics and the 'Jewish Question', 1914–1919
About this book
Lucia J. Linares offers the first sustained examination of the ways in which questions about German-Jewish citizenship and religious, national identity – namely the "Jewish Question" – shaped the politics of Imperial Germany in its final years, influencing the processes of parliamentarisation and democratisation. The "Jewish Question" still tends to be interpreted with hindsight, that is, in the context of the Holocaust and from a social or cultural historical perspective. While considering the short- and long-term effects the "Jewish Question" had on the rise of German antisemitism, this new study stresses its contingency and ambivalence. Jewish questions, this e-book argues, revealed the paradoxes of German state-building and the difficulties of breaking down older forms of corporate identity for the sake of national-cultural homogeneity. Linares presents a new interpretation of the role that the "problem" of German Jewry played in the political debates and decisions that paved the way for the Weimar Republic.
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Information
Table of contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- I. A genealogy of the Jewish Question
- II. The Jewish Question in war time: Germany’s eastern policy, 1914–1916
- III. Constitutionalism and secularism in the Jewish census of 1916
- IV. ‘Article 113 leads into the deepest questions of the concept of nationality’: minority rights in the Weimar constitution
- V. ‘Tagesordnung: Judenfrage’: a German (Jewish) united front at Paris
- Conclusion
- Bibliography