DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Hits 1 – 19 of 19

1
Yiddish, or Jewish German? : the Holocaust, the Goethe-Institut and Germany’s neglected obligation to peace and the common cultural heritage
BASE
Show details
2
Double trouble – visual and phonological impairments in English dyslexic readers
Provazza, S; Adams, A-M; Giofrè, D. - : Frontiers Media, 2019
BASE
Show details
3
Comparing journalism cultures in Britain and Germany: Confrontation, Contextualization, Conformity
BASE
Show details
4
From London to Leipzig and back: (Post-)Punk, ‘Endzeit’ and Gothic in the GDR
BASE
Show details
5
Early Arabic studies in western Europe : letters from Marcus Welser to Marquard Freher, 1611-1612, on Arabic epigraphy
Botley, Paul. - : Peeters Online Journals, 2018
BASE
Show details
6
Detection of ground parrot vocalisation: a multiple instance learning approach
Nguyen, Duc Thanh; Ogunbona, Philip O; Li, Wanqing. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2017
BASE
Show details
7
‘These four letters s o l a are not there’: language and theology in Luther’s translation of the New Testament
Methuen, Charlotte. - : Cambridge University Press, 2017
BASE
Show details
8
Bilingualism in Bolzano-Bozen: a nexus analysis
BASE
Show details
9
Ranked document selection
In: http://www.dcc.uchile.cl/~gnavarro/ps/swat14.pdf (2014)
BASE
Show details
10
The Introspective Sponger: Hamlet in the Poetry of Bertolt Brecht
Montironi, Maria Elisa. - : Cardiff University Press, 2012
BASE
Show details
11
Colonial failure in the new world in the sixteenth century: a French and German comparison
Lang, Stefan. - 2011
BASE
Show details
12
Cultural topography and emotional legacies in Durs Grunbein's Dresden poetry
Fuchs, Anne. - : Camden House, 2011
BASE
Show details
13
Introduction
Fuchs, Anne; James-Chakraborty, K.; Shortt, Linda. - : Camden House, 2011
BASE
Show details
14
The scholar advocate: Rudolf Schlesinger's writings on Marxism and Soviet historiography
Abstract: As a notable academic, Marxist writer and one-time political activist, an extensive critique of Rudolf Schlesinger’s writings is long overdue. Raised in the revolutionary atmosphere of early twentieth century Austria, Schlesinger soon became embroiled in central European communism, taking on full-time work for the German Communist Party in Berlin, Prague and Moscow. He left the Soviet Union during the purges, having been described as ‘alien to the party’, and made his way to the UK where he fostered a reputation as an informed and prolific scholar. This investigation is not intended to be a biography of Schlesinger, but rather an ‘intellectual biography’, an examination of his monographs, papers, drafts and memoir reflections. This allows for an appreciation of his academic contribution and an understanding of his unique personal motivation and perspective. Given his experiences, as well as the cultural, political and ideological paradigm from which he emerged, this analysis provides insights into Marxist theory, the labour movement, the Soviet Union and German communism. It also throws light upon the intellectual climate in the West during the cold war, providing a historiographical snapshot of academic Soviet studies, particularly in the UK. The thesis is divided into two sections, with each exploring a different aspect of Schlesinger’s writing. The first traces Schlesinger’s theoretical development and education, detailing and analysing the impact of Luxemburg, Lenin, Marx and Engels on his thought and writing. Schlesinger emerges as a Leninist, whose understanding of the dialectical nature of Marxism leads him to seek the next stage in its development, since Lenin’s revolutionary successes forever altered the socio-economic landscape and thus fated his theories to obsolescence. An examination of Schlesinger’s attitude towards Stalin as a Marxist theorist illuminates his pragmatic stance regarding the Soviet leader. Whilst Stalin’s rule had a considerable human cost and a deleterious impact upon Marxist theory, to Schlesinger, his leadership was necessary to further the existence of the Soviet state, the sole manifestation of the great social democratic experiment. The second section focuses on Schlesinger’s writings concerning Soviet historiography. It is possible to discern changes in tone, emphasis and argument in his work on this subject. A dichotomy emerges between Schlesinger’s positive portrayal of historiographical developments in the Soviet Union in papers written before Stalin’s death and his retrospective condemnation of these events after 1953. This latter attitude chimes with his personal memoir reflections of life as an intellectual in Stalin’s Russia, in which he described a highly controlled, academically stagnant society; yet it contrasts starkly with his earlier position. It is also possible to detect parallels between Schlesinger’s changing emphasis and the dynamics of official Soviet attitudes. An explanation is required if Schlesinger is not to be dismissed as inconsistent or polemical. It is argued that Schlesinger can be accurately described as a ‘scholar advocate’, both in terms of a defender of the Soviet experiment and a proponent of Marxism and social democracy. This characterisation allows for an understanding of Schlesinger’s changing stance and motivations and explains his apparent inconsistency. Schlesinger was loyal to Marxism in general, but not to the fluctuating dictates of the Russian party. He was not a polemicist or propagandist but instead sought to stay loyal to wider Marxist ideals and methodology. For Schlesinger, his pragmatism ensured that he did not judge events in Russia from the rose-tinted spectacles of utopianism; his attitude was not swayed by single events, however tragic, and he was aware both of the utility and the transient nature of Stalin’s rule. This helps to explain his positive attitude. In addition, Schlesinger was keen to defend Marxism and the Soviet Union against what he perceived as unfair criticism; he sought to counter myths and misunderstandings propagated by disillusioned supporters and opponents. Schlesinger consciously attempted to combat what he saw, and many academics have recognised, as the cold war bias of a section of Western comment and scholarship. This may, perhaps, have led Schlesinger to paint too optimistic a picture of the Soviet Union, but his work is a useful and necessary counterbalance to other literature. Schlesinger was no propagandist, and recognition of his unique and conscious motivation allows for a full appreciation of his rich and varied writings.
Keyword: DD Germany; DK Russia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet Republics
URL: http://theses.gla.ac.uk/73/
http://theses.gla.ac.uk/73/1/2008mckendryphd.pdf
https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/record=b2614079
BASE
Hide details
15
Was Germany ever united? Evidence from intra- and international trade 1885–1933
Wolf, Nikolaus. - : University of Warwick, Department of Economics, 2008
BASE
Show details
16
Reconciliation between the generations : the normalisation of the image of the ordinary German soldier in recent literature
Schmitz, Helmut. - : Camden House, 2006
BASE
Show details
17
Historikerstreit and kollektivschuld
Gross, Raphael. - : Kröner, 2002
BASE
Show details
18
Uenuku : a Tainui taonga at the Te Awamutu District Museum ; Tainui taonga at the Te Awamutu District Museum
Evans, Jennifer A. (Jennifer Anne), 1963-. - : Te Awamutu, N.Z. : Te Awamutu District Museum, 1994
BASE
Show details
19
Images of Germany: a theory-based approach to the classification, analysis, and critique of British attitudes towards Germany, 1890-1940
BASE
Show details

Catalogues
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
19
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern