Modern Jena as a Model of Cultural Regeneration in Wilhelmine Germany

The path-breaking work of Carl Schorske and other scholars have tended to locate the great urban centers as the main sites of modernist culture. But simply to recall the Dessau of Gropius, the Basel of Nietzsche and Burckhardt, and the Czernowitz of Celan, is to conjure an alternative image. This ar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the history of ideas 2013-04, Vol.74 (2), p.267-288
1. Verfasser: Werner, Meike G.
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creator Werner, Meike G.
description The path-breaking work of Carl Schorske and other scholars have tended to locate the great urban centers as the main sites of modernist culture. But simply to recall the Dessau of Gropius, the Basel of Nietzsche and Burckhardt, and the Czernowitz of Celan, is to conjure an alternative image. This article considers aspects of modernity in Jena, and focuses in particular on how the publisher Eugen Diederichs used this provincial city as template for a form of German modernism that was substantively different than the publishing program of Samuel Fischer in Berlin.
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subjects Cities
Cultural behaviour
Cultural differences
Europe
Fairy tales
Focus
German
German literature
Germany
History of ideas
Intellectuals
Modern literature
Modernism
Modernist art
Nation state
Politics
Population growth
Publishing industry
Religion
Renaissance art
Traditions
Universities
World War One
title Modern Jena as a Model of Cultural Regeneration in Wilhelmine Germany
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