وبلاگ بلیان

Maximillian Harden : Censor Germaniae the Critic in Opposition From Bismarck to the Rise of Nazism

معرفی کتاب «Maximillian Harden : Censor Germaniae the Critic in Opposition From Bismarck to the Rise of Nazism» نوشتهٔ Harry F. Young (auth.)، منتشرشده توسط نشر Springer Netherlands در سال 1959. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

Maximilian Harden, editor of the magazine Die :(,ukunft (The Future), which appeared weekly from 1892 until 1922, was Wilhelminian Germany's greatest publicist. Bismarck and Clemenceau as well as Max Reinhardt and Pirandello recognized his political and literary genius. Thomas Mann sent early works to him with the inscription: "To the hero and savior";1 and when Paul Valery learned that Harden had attended one of his lectures, he wrote that there was "nothing more flattering and. . . intimi­ dating than to know that you were among those who had listened to me. "2 Today Harden is misunderstood, if not forgotten. It is known that he was an actor who turned to journalism and became famous as a champion of the retired Bismarck. He was the most persistent and daring critic of Kaiser Wilhelm II. He befriended Friedrich von Holstein, the disgraced "evil genius" of the Foreign Office. He entered the First World War a flaming patriot, but later became the voice of the "good German. " He vainly aspired to a post of high responsibility under the Weimar Repub­ lic; and he died in 1927, allegedly a bitter, misanthropic radical. His name is associated with the homosexual scandals of 1907-1909, which were the result of his public campaign against Prince Eulenburg, the Kaiser's close friend and advisor. More than anything else, the Eulenburg affair has obscured Harden's accomplishments as the master critic and guide to a generation of German intellectuals and politicians. Maximilian Harden, editor of the magazine Die :(, ukunft (The Future), which appeared weekly from 1892 until 1922, was Wilhelminian Germany's greatest publicist. Bismarck and Clemenceau as well as Max Reinhardt and Pirandello recognized his political and literary genius. Thomas Mann sent early works to him with the inscription: "To the hero and savior";1 and when Paul Valery learned that Harden had attended one of his lectures, he wrote that there was "nothing more flattering and. . . intimiƯ dating than to know that you were among those who had listened to me. "2 Today Harden is misunderstood, if not forgotten. It is known that he was an actor who turned to journalism and became famous as a champion of the retired Bismarck. He was the most persistent and daring critic of Kaiser Wilhelm II. He befriended Friedrich von Holstein, the disgraced "evil genius" of the Foreign Office. He entered the First World War a flaming patriot, but later became the voice of the "good German." He vainly aspired to a post of high responsibility under the Weimar RepubƯ lic; and he died in 1927, allegedly a bitter, misanthropic radical. His name is associated with the homosexual scandals of 1907-1909, which were the result of his public campaign against Prince Eulenburg, the Kaiser's close friend and advisor. More than anything else, the Eulenburg affair has obscured Harden's accomplishments as the master critic and guide to a generation of German intellectuals and politicians Front Matter....Pages i-x Introduction....Pages 1-4 German and Jew....Pages 5-15 Literature and the Theater....Pages 16-35 Bismarck and the Founding of the Zukunft ....Pages 36-53 The New Course....Pages 54-81 The Eulenburg Affair....Pages 82-125 Colleagues, Friends, and Enemies....Pages 126-153 Germany’s Future....Pages 154-177 War and Democracy....Pages 178-218 The Weimar Republic and the End of the Zukunft ....Pages 219-256 The Last Years....Pages 257-268 Conclusion....Pages 269-273 Back Matter....Pages 274-288
دانلود کتاب Maximillian Harden : Censor Germaniae the Critic in Opposition From Bismarck to the Rise of Nazism