Beyond Catastrophe: German Intellectuals and Cultural Renewal After World War II, 1945-1955

כריכה קדמית
Lexington Books, 2006 - 195 עמודים
Beyond Catastrophe examines the post-World War II leadership efforts of four major German intellectuals: Karl Jaspers, Thomas Mann, Friedrich Meinecke, and Bertolt Brecht. Clark focuses on the symbolic, practical, and theoretical contributions of these men to post-war cultural reconstruction, and pays special attention to their key works of the period -- The German Catastrophe, Doctor Faustus, The Question of German Guilt, and Turandot -- in which they addressed the key issues of the period including responsibility and guilt for the National Socialist regime, German distinctiveness, the possibility of a renewed humanism, and the relationship of intellectuals to the broader society. Addressing an important lacuna in twentieth-century intellectual history, Beyond Catastrophe will appeal to scholars of history and German studies.
 

תוכן

Guardian of the Past Friedrich Meinecke
15
A Prophet Without Honor Karl Jaspers
49
The Insider as Outsider Thomas Mann
83
Hero or Villain? Bertolt Brecht in the GDR
129
Conclusion
167

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מידע על המחבר (2006)

Mark W. Clark is associate professor of history and philosophy at the University of Virginia's College at Wise.

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