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The Weimar Moment's evocative assault on closure and political
reaction, its offering of democracy against the politics of narrow
self-interest cloaked in nationalist appeals to Volk and
"community"-or, as would be the case in Nazi Germany, "race"-cannot
but appeal to us today. This appeal-its historical grounding and
content, its complexities and tensions, its variegated expressions
across the networks of power and thought-is the essential context
of the present volume, whose basic premise is unhappiness with
Hegel's remark that we learn no more from history than we cannot
learn from it. The challenge of the papers in this volume is to
provide the material to confront the present effectively drawing
from what we can and do understand.
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