George L. Mosse (1918-99) was a legendary scholar, teacher, and mentor. A refugee from Nazi Germany, in 1955 he joined the Department of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he was both influential and popular. Mosse was an early leader in the study of modern European cultural and intellectual history, the study of fascism, and the history of sexuality and masculinity. Over his career he authored more than two dozen books.
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Acknowledgments A Critical Introduction by Enzo Traverso Introduction: Nationalism and Human Perceptions PART I 1. Literature and Society in Germany 2. What Germans Really Read 3. Death, Time, and History: VOElkisch Utopia and Its Transcendence 4. The Poet and the Exercise of Political Power: Gabriele D'Annunzio 5. Caesarism, Circuses, and Monuments 6. The French Right and the Working Classes: Les Jaunes 7. The Heritage of Socialist Humanism PART II 8. Toward a General Theory of Fascism 9. The Occult Origins of National Socialism 10. Nazi Polemical Theater: The Kampfbu?hne 11. Fascism and the Avant-Garde PART III 12. The Secularization of Jewish Theology 13. The Jews and the German War Experience, 1914-1918 14. German Socialists and the Jewish Question in the Weimar Republic Notes Index
"Stimulating and well written."-New York Times