
Over the last two centuries and indeed up to the present day, Eastern Europe's lands and peoples have conjured up a complex mixture of fascination, anxiety, promise, and peril for Germans looking eastwards. Across the generations, a varied cast of German writers, artists, philosophers, diplomats, political leaders, generals, and Nazi racial fanatics have imagined (often in very different ways) a special German mission in the East, forging a frontier myth that paralleled the American myths of the 'Wild West' and 'Manifest Destiny'. Through close analysis of German views of the East from 1800 to our own times, The German Myth of the East reveals that this crucial international relationship has in fact been integral to how Germans have defined (and repeatedly redefined) themselves and their own national identity. In particular, what was ultimately at stake for Germans was their own uncertain position in Europe, between East and West. Paradoxically, the East came to be viewed as both an attractive land of unlimited potential for the future and as a place undeveloped, dangerous, wild, dirty, and uncultured. Running the gamut from the messages of international understanding announced by generations of German scholars and sympathetic writers, to the violent racial utopia envisaged by the Nazis, German imaginings of the East represent a crucial, yet unfamiliar, part of modern European history, and one that remains fundamentally important today in the context of an expanded European Union.
This book investigates how the persistent German conceptualization of the East as a frontier has functioned as a primary mechanism for defining German national identity from 1800 to the present. Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius, a professor of history, utilizes a wide array of cultural, political, and military primary sources to argue that the 'myth of the East' served as a mirror for German self-perception. By examining the tension between viewing the East as a land of promise and a site of danger, the author demonstrates how this relationship shaped Germany's uncertain position between Eastern and Western Europe.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of German cultural history and national identity formation. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the clarity with which the author synthesizes complex intellectual trends over a two-hundred-year period.
Page Count:
313
Publication Date:
2010-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191610461
ISBN-13:
9780191610462
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