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This is the first book-length study to consider Ricarda Huch's
historical-political thought and assess Huch's place within the
lively historiographical discourses of the 1920s. One of the most
famous writers of her day, Huch (1864-1947) was known for her
poetry, fiction, and histories of German Romanticism and the Thirty
Years' War. Like many of her generation Huch was shaken by
Germany's defeat in the First World War, and this shock motivated
her to use her historiography to address Germany's post-war
situation. Convinced that the German nation possessed an identity
best expressed by the ideals of Romaniticism, Huch attributed
Germany's decline to the westernization of German political
culture; absolutism and centralization had replaced the theoretical
perfection of the decentralized early Holy Roman Empire of the
German Nation. Her Weimar histories of medieval and
nineteenth-century Germany urged a defeated and traumatized nation
to return to a path that had been abandoned during the Wilhelmine
Empire. Topics explored include Huch's use of Nietzschean
monumentalism, a comparison with popular historians of the period
(e.g. E. Kantorowicz), the echoes of her political thought in her
poetry and fiction, and her complex relationship to German
nationalism.
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