Though the history of the German railway system is often
associated with the transportation of Jews to labor and death
camps, Todd Presner looks instead to the completion of the first
German railway lines and their role in remapping the cultural
geography and intellectual history of Germany's Jews.
Treating the German railway as both an iconic symbol of
modernity and a crucial social, technological, and political force,
Presner advances a groundbreaking interpretation of the ways in
which mobility is inextricably linked to German and Jewish visions
of modernity. Moving beyond the tired model of a failed
German-Jewish dialogue, Presner emphasizes the mutual entanglement
of the very categories of German and Jewish and the many sites of
contact and exchange that occurred between German and Jewish
thinkers.
Turning to philosophy, literature, and the history of
technology, and drawing on transnational cultural and diaspora
studies, Presner charts the influence of increased mobility on
interactions between Germans and Jews. He considers such major
figures as Kafka, Heidegger, Arendt, Freud, Sebald, Hegel, and
Heine, reading poetry next to philosophy, architecture next to
literature, and railway maps next to cultural history.
Rather than a conventional, linear history that culminates in
the tragedy of the Holocaust, Presner produces a cultural mapping
that articulates a much more complex story of the hopes and
catastrophes of mobile modernity. By focusing on the spaces of
encounter emblematically represented by the overdetermined
triangulation of Germans, Jews, and trains, he introduces a new
genealogy for the study of European and German-Jewish
modernity.
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