For decades after the Second World War, historians and writers
depicted cultural life in Germany's Weimar Republic (1919-1933) as
an unstable mixture of avant-garde experimentation, decadence, and
proto-fascist tendencies. Their limited definition of "culture" as
a canon of works by elites hindered the study of everyday cultural
forms. A younger generation of scholars now takes the broad view of
culture as not merely the work of elite artists and intellectuals,
but as constructed in everyday practice and thorough popular
participation. This is the first book to offer an accessible
cross-section of these "new cultural history" approaches to the
Weimar Republic. The essays in this volume recover the everyday by
focusing on visual and political culture, transnational currents in
the mass media, and the intense popular interest in sports, health,
and nature. "Weimar Culture Revisited" attests to the
extraordinarily multi-faceted nature of democracy in interwar
Germany.
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