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Confronting the Nation brings together twelve of celebrated historian George L. Mosse's most important essays to explore competing forms of European nationalism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Mosse coins the term "civic religion" to describe how nationalism, especially in Germany and France, simultaneously inspired and disciplined the populace through the use of rituals and symbols. The definition of citizenship shaped by this nationalism, however, frequently excluded Jews, who were stereotyped as outsiders who sought to undermine the national community. With keen attention to liberal forms of nationalism, Mosse examines the clash of aspirational visions of an inclusive nation against cultural registers of nativist political ideologies.
Mosse considers a broad range of topics, from Nazi book burnings to Americans' search for unifying national symbols during the Great Depression, exploring how the development of particular modes of art, architecture, and mass movements served nationalist agendas by dictating who was included in the image of the nation. These essays retain their significance today in their examination of the cultural and social implications of contemporary nationalism. A new critical introduction by Shulamit Volkov, professor emerita of history at Tel Aviv University, situates Mosse's analysis within its historiographical context.
Contents
Acknowledgments
A Critical Introduction by Shulamit Volkov
Introduction: Confronting the Nation
Part I: The Nation Displays Itself
1. National Anthems: The Nation Militant
2. National Self-Representation during the 1930s in Europe and the United States
3. Community in the Thought of Nationalism, Fascism, and the Radical Right
4. Political Style and Political Theory: Totalitarian Democracy Revisited
5. Fascism and the French Revolution
6. The Political Culture of Italian Futurism
7. Bookburning and Betrayal by the German Intellectuals
Part II: The Jews and the Modern Nation
8. The Jews and the Civic Religion of Nationalism
9. Jewish Emancipation: Between Bildung and Respectability
10. German Jews and Liberalism in Retrospect
11. Max Nordau: Liberalism and the New Jew
12. Gershom Scholem as a German Jew
Notes
Index



