Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- 1 INTRODUCTION : THE GERMAN LANDS AND PEOPLE
- 2 MEDIAEVAL GERMANY
- 3 THE AGE OF CONFESSIONALISM, 1500–1648
- 4 THE AGE OF ABSOLUTISM, 1648–1815
- 5 THE AGE OF INDUSTRIALISATION, 1815–1918
- 6 DEMOCRACY AND DICTATORSHIP, 1918–45
- 7 THE TWO GERMANIES, 1945–90
- 8 THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY SINCE 1990
- 9 PATTERNS AND PROBLEMS OF GERMAN HISTORY
- Suggestions for further reading
- Index
Preface
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- 1 INTRODUCTION : THE GERMAN LANDS AND PEOPLE
- 2 MEDIAEVAL GERMANY
- 3 THE AGE OF CONFESSIONALISM, 1500–1648
- 4 THE AGE OF ABSOLUTISM, 1648–1815
- 5 THE AGE OF INDUSTRIALISATION, 1815–1918
- 6 DEMOCRACY AND DICTATORSHIP, 1918–45
- 7 THE TWO GERMANIES, 1945–90
- 8 THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY SINCE 1990
- 9 PATTERNS AND PROBLEMS OF GERMAN HISTORY
- Suggestions for further reading
- Index
Summary
A book such as this is infinitely easier to criticise than to write. The attempt to compress over a thousand years of highly complex history into a brief volume will inevitably provoke squeals of protest from countless specialists, who see their own particular patches distorted, constrained, misrepresented, even ignored. Yet a brief history of such a large topic can make no attempt at comprehensiveness. At best it can provide an intelligent guide to the broad sweep of developments.
These limitations are indeed partly inherent in the nature of historical writing, which cannot be a simple matter of recounting an agreed narrative, but rather must be a process of imposing an order on the mass of material – and on the interpretations of that material – which comes to us from the past. But it is particularly the case for a concise history of Germany that some brutal decisions about selection and omission have had to be made. While readers will all have their own views on the matter, the author has had to make particular choices. In terms of space devoted to different periods, the book operates on the landscape principle: things nearer to the observer loom larger, are perceived in closer detail, than the mistier general views of the distant horizons. Thus chapters generally deal with progressively shorter periods of time as the present is neared. Within the general landscape surveyed some features appear more important than others.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Concise History of Germany , pp. xv - xviiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004