Vertigo The rise and fall of Weimar Germany
Book - 2024
"Germany, 1918: a country in flux. The First World War is over, the nation defeated. Revolution is afoot, the monarchy has fallen and the victory of democracy beckons. Everything must change with the times. Out of the ashes of the First World War, Germany launches an unprecedented political project- its first democratic government. The Weimar Republic is established. The years that follow see political extremism, economic upheaval, revolutionary violence and the transformation of Germany. Tradition is shaken to its core as a triumphant procession of liberated lifestyles emerges. Women conquer the racetracks and tennis courts, go out alone in the evenings, cut their hair short and cast the idea of marriage aside. Unisex style comes into... fashion, androgynous and experimental. People revel in the discovery of leisure, filling up boxing halls, dance palaces and the hotspots of the New Age, embracing the department stores' promise of happiness and accepting the streets as a place of fierce political battles. In this short burst of life between the wars, amidst a frenzy of change, comes a backlash from those who do not see themselves reflected in the new Republic. Little by little, deep divisions begin to emerge. Divisions that would bring devastating consequences, altering the course of the twentieth century and the lives of millions around the world. Vertigo is a vital, kaleidoscopic portrait of a pivotal moment in German history"--Publisher's description.
Location | Call Number | Status | |
---|---|---|---|
2nd Floor New Shelf | 943.085/Jahner | (NEW SHELF) | Due Mar 28, 2025 |
- Subjects
- Genres
- History
Nonfiction novels
Informational works - Published
-
New York :
Basic Books
[2024]
- Language
- English
German - Main Author
- Other Authors
- Edition
- First U.S. edition
- Item Description
- Translation of: Höhenrausch : das kurze Leben zwischen den Kriegen.
First published as "Höhenrausch: Das kurze Leben zwischen den Kriegen" by Rowohlt Berlin, 2022. - Physical Description
- xviii, 454 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 391-404) and index.
- ISBN
- 9781541606203
- Preface: The New Life
- 1. When the War Came Home
- The first few days
- Unholy alliance
- Undefeated in the field, but vanquished by women
- 'You can't dance the shame from your body'
- 'Day labourers of death'
- Frontline experience, domestic misery
- Servants of state in the crosshairs
- Ebert, a man despised
- 2. When Money Dies
- Loser pays all
- Live for the moment
- Inflation, new freedom and moral collapse - Otto Dix & Co. see the Republic as one big brothel
- The turning point: 20 pfennigs = 120 billion marks
- Hurtling again, but upwards this time
- 3. Extreme Living
- In the Bauhaus house
- 'We actually live like pigs, terribly thoughtlessly'
- Door to door - new building for the urban masses
- Built euphoria
- The flat roof as a matter of conscience - Heimatschutz architecture
- 4. 'Destinies Behind Typewriters' - The Supporting Class of the New Age
- At eight o'clock in the morning strange beings populate the streets
- Quick even when sitting down: the quiet dramas of the office
- 'I want to stay pretty for as long as I can'
- Intellectuals in the office - cameos from the upper class
- 5. Precarious Balance: The Death of Ebert, the Arrival of Hindenburg
- The president sits a posthumous test - and so does the Republic
- The hero of Tannenberg in blackredmustard
- Flag dispute on a Baltic beach
- 6. Traffic as the Art of Citizenship
- 'Never too near or too far': the city and the sense of touch
- A city without people
- Flaneurs and car drivers
- 'Thinking ore' and singing cars
- Up and away - women at the wheel
- 7. The Charleston Years
- 'They pay, and you must dance'
- 'Shimmy shake!'
- Out of Africa
- Shisha pipes in Haus Vaterland, an office in Moka Efti
- 8. Self-optimisation: Perfecting Leisure and the Body
- Lunapark
- In the cinema: visible voices
- 'Poets should box'
- The Blue Light - Leni Riefenstahl emancipates herself as well
- 'I'm only really cheerful in my association'
- Struggle, against whomever
- 9. Between Woman and Man - Gender Doubts
- 'The fashionable, skinny half-boy'
- Politics with hair-scissors: the bob
- Rittmasters with bosoms - the cultural appropriation of the monocle
- Strong women, insecure men
- Bull necks, archangels, character studies and pea-brains - on the physiognomy of the Weimar Republic
- 10. The Work Runs Out
- New York miscalculates, and the stone starts rolling
- Black zero: budgetary consolidation at any price
- A yarn manufacturer from Delmenhorst is the final straw - the plunge is unstoppable
- Unemployed, and not on benefits
- Work and home: the land of timeless industry
- The jobless don't dream of revolution
- 'Productive and parasitic capital' - wounded honour among workers and anti-Semitism
- 11. The Mood Plummets, Taste Adapts - Cultural Conflicts in a Time of Depression
- 'It Only Happens Once, It'll Never Come Again': peak performances in spite of the crisis
- Rule of the inferior: nothing but trash?
- Campaigns of optimism for the climate of consumption
- The uprising of the provinces: agrarian romanticism and ecology
- The end of the Charleston
- 12. Evening Over Potsdam - the End of a Community of Communication
- Banquet with easel
- On the left Die Weltbühne, on the right Die Tat
- Please be as ruthless as possible: arrogance and submission
- 13. Lonely Elites - Cabinet Politics vs Populism
- The prelude: coup in Prussia - von Papen drives the regional government out of office
- Final offer: networker Kurt von Schleicher and the cross-party front
- 14. The End: Chancellor Hitler
- Celebration and terror
- From chancellor to Fuhrer out of 'heart-breaking disunity'
- Democracy abolishes itself
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Endnotes
- Acknowledgements
- Picture credits
- Text credits
- Index