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Informed by recent historical research on nineteenth-century
nationalism, this book demonstrates how the construction of a
German national identity, especially in girls' education, came to
be experienced by reading girls. The age of nationalism in
nineteenth-century Germany generally conjures up images of the
Prussian military, Furst Otto von Bismarck, and Hohenzollern kings
who welded together a nation out of disparate principalities
through war and domestic social policy. Good Girls, Good Germans
looks at how girls and young women became "national" during this
period by participating in the national community in the home, in
state-sponsored Toechterschulen, and in their reading of
Madchenliteratur. By learning to subordinate desires for individual
agency to the perceived needs of the national community -- what
Askey calls "emotional nationalism" -- girls could fulfill their
class- andgender-specific roles in society and discover a sense of
their importance for the progress of the German nation. Informed by
recent historical research on nineteenth-century nationalism, Good
Girls, Good Germansdemonstrates how the top-down construction of a
national identity, especially in girls' education, came to be
experienced by reading girls. Chapters in this book examine
literature published for and taught to girls that encouraged
readers to view domestic duties -- and even romance -- as potential
avenues for national expression. By aligning her heart with the
demands of the nation, a girl could successfully display her
national involvement within the confines of the private sphere.
Jennifer Drake Askey is Coordinator of Academic Program Development
at Wilfrid Laurier University.
Essays examining aspects of German book history -- in relation to
writers, readers, and publishers -- from the 1780s to the 1930s.
Over the long nineteenth century, German book publishing
experienced an unprecedented boom, outstripping by 1910 all other
Western nations. Responding to the spread of literacy, publishers
found new marketing methods and recalibrated their relationships to
authors. Technical innovations made books for a range of budgets
possible. Yearbooks, encyclopedias, and boxed sets also multiplied.
A renewed interest in connoisseurship meant that books signified
tasteand affiliation. While reading could be a group activity, the
splintering of the publishing industry into niche markets made it
seem an ever-more private and individualistic affair, promising
variously self-help, information, Bildung, moral edification, and
titillation. The essays in this volume examine what Robert Darnton
has termed the "communications circuit": the life-cycle of the book
as a convergence of complex cultural, social, and
economicphenomena. In examining facets of the lives of select books
from the late 1780s to the early 1930s that Germans actually read,
the essays present a complex and nuanced picture of writing,
publishing, and reading in the shadow of nation building and class
formation, and suggest how the analysis of texts and the study of
books can inform one another. Contributors: Jennifer Askey, Ulrich
Bach, Kirsten Belgum, Matthew Erlin, Jana Mikota, Mary Paddock,
Theodore Rippey, Jeffrey Sammons, Lynne Tatlock, Katrin Voelkner,
Karin Wurst. Lynne Tatlock is Hortense and Tobias Lewin
Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at Washington University
in St. Louis.
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