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This innovative study of remembrance in Weimar Germany analyses how experiences and memories of the Great War were transformed along political lines after 1918. Examining the symbolism, language and performative power of public commemoration, Benjamin Ziemann reveals how individual recollections fed into the public narrative of the experience of war. Challenging conventional wisdom that nationalist narratives dominated commemoration, this book demonstrates that Social Democrat war veterans participated in the commemoration of the war at all levels: supporting the 'no more war' movement, mourning the fallen at war memorials and demanding a politics of international solidarity. It describes how the moderate Socialist Left related the legitimacy of the Republic to their experiences in the Imperial army and acknowledged the military defeat of 1918 as a moment of liberation. This is the first comprehensive analysis of war remembrances in post-war Germany and a radical reassessment of the democratic potential of the Weimar Republic.
This innovative study of remembrance in Weimar Germany analyses how experiences and memories of the Great War were transformed along political lines after 1918. Examining the symbolism, language and performative power of public commemoration, Benjamin Ziemann reveals how individual recollections fed into the public narrative of the experience of war. Challenging conventional wisdom that nationalist narratives dominated commemoration, this book demonstrates that Social Democrat war veterans participated in the commemoration of the war at all levels: supporting the 'no more war' movement, mourning the fallen at war memorials and demanding a politics of international solidarity. It describes how the moderate Socialist Left related the legitimacy of the Republic to their experiences in the Imperial army and acknowledged the military defeat of 1918 as a moment of liberation. This is the first comprehensive analysis of war remembrances in post-war Germany and a radical reassessment of the democratic potential of the Weimar Republic.
Introduction; 1. 'A short period of insight': symbolizing defeat as liberation, 1918–23; 2. Republican war memories: the Reichsbanner Black Red Gold; 3. The personal microcosm of Reichsbanner activism; 4. Public commemorations and republican politics; 5. In search of a national symbol, 1924–33; 6. Pacifist veterans and the politics of military history; 7. Mass media and the changing texture of war remembrance, 1928–33; Conclusion; Bibliography.
An innovative study of remembrance in Weimar Germany and how war experiences and memories were transformed along political lines.
Benjamin Ziemann is Professor of Modern German History at the University of Sheffield. An expert on the social, political and cultural history of modern Germany, his previous publications include War Experiences in Rural Germany, 1914–1923 (2007) and The German Soldiers of the Great War. Letters and Eyewitness Accounts (co-edited with Bernd Ulrich, 2010).
'Benjamin Ziemann's book, filled with surprising new material,
vigorous new characters and above all, strikingly new perspectives,
will significantly alter several generations' understandings of
what happened during Weimar … compellingly written, exhaustively
researched and rigorously argued, [it] is a powerful contribution
to the continuing effort to comprehend the multiple meanings of the
Great War.' German History
'A far richer and more complicated picture of Weimar's short-lived
democracy emerges from Ziemann's study, one in which a plethora of
groups and individuals fought for prominence in the state's public
spaces and fought to assert their own symbolic investments over the
national culture, especially with regard to the war and its
meaning; these are precisely the 'contested commemorations' of the
title.' H-Soz-u-Kult
'As Benjamin Ziemann richly illustrates in this book, the end of
the Great War was immediately followed in Germany by a heated
battle between competing narratives … he is keen to embed the
production and reception of culture within its particular
historical context. In this, he is brilliantly successful, and his
book should be read by all those who wish to take up the theme of
the cultural history of war experience of the conflict.' Jesse
Kauffman, Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies
'Exhaustively researched, intelligently organized and strongly
argued, it forces us to reconsider older assumptions about the
war's legacy of 'brutalization' and the 'weakness' of the
republican settlement of 1918. Ziemann's book has the potential to
stimulate a new debate about the reverberations of war between 1918
and 1933 and the reasons why (and if) Weimar ultimately failed.
Without doubt, this superb monograph will become compulsory reading
for scholars working in the fields of World War I studies and
modern European history alike.' Stefan Goebel, German Studies
Review
'Ziemann's account stands as a welcome addition to more recent
scholarship on the Weimar era that stresses the contingency of
politics and culture and rejects more simplistic accounts of a
German republic doomed to failure. Most important, Ziemann's
history illuminates a hotly contested conflict for the survival of
the Weimar Republic fought on the important battlefields of symbol,
public performance, and collective memory that provides the reader
with important new insights into the complicated nature of
Germany's first real experiment with democracy.' Barry A. Jackisch,
Central European History
'Seeking to take a fresh look at the historical evidence, Benjamin
Ziemann's study of pro-republican commemorations of the First World
War is at the fore-front of a gradually consolidating literature
that embraces the openness and contingencies of the first German
democracy … Ziemann adds to this growing literature a clearly
argued and thoroughly contextualized study of the pro-republican
war remembrances propagated by the 'Reichsbund of War Disabled, War
Veterans and War Dependants' and the 'Reichsbanner Black-Red-Gold'
… In emphasizing the 'tremendous persistence' with which Social
Democrats elaborated a coherent set of republican war remembrances
under highly polarized political conditions, [Ziemann's] study
contributes immensely not only to the comparative literature on the
remembrance of the First World War, but also to our growing
understanding of the performative power and challenges of Weimar
democracy.' Manuela Achilles, European History Quarterly
'That the legacy of the First World War was a definitive
battleground in Weimar Germany is no surprise, but Benjamin
Ziemann's study of republican war veterans significantly recasts
the terms of this battle. … Contested Commemorations thus offers
further compelling evidence that the Weimar Republic was scarcely a
republic without republicans … Ziemann's analysis moves skillfully
from the memoirs and articles of individual veterans … to the
organizations of republican veterans, their journals, and
commemorative activities … [His] elucidation of their campaigns to
expose and defy the myths surrounding Germany's war and defeat
reveals a much more robust republican movement than is often
presumed, one that did not readily surrender in a struggle that
ultimately involved the legitimacy of the republican state.'
Kathleen Canning, The Journal of Modern History
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