Paperback : £26.92
Emotions make history and have their own history. Exploring the emotional worlds of the German people, this book tells a very different story of the twentieth century. Ute Frevert reveals how emotions have shaped and influenced not only individuals but entire societies. Politicians use emotions, and institutions frame them, while social movements work with and through them. Ute Frevert's engaging analysis of twenty essential and powerful emotions – including anger, grief, hate, love, pride, shame and trust – explores how emotions coloured major events and developments from the German Empire to the Federal Republic until this very day. Emotions also have a history, illustrated by the changing forms, meanings and atmosphere of various emotions in twentieth-century Germany: for example, hate was a driving force behind National Socialism but is out of place in a democracy. Around 1900, people associated practices with love or nostalgia that do not resonate with us today. Showcasing why Germans were enthusiastic about the war in 1914 and proud of their national football team in 2006, this book highlights the historical power of emotions as much as their own historicity.
Emotions make history and have their own history. Exploring the emotional worlds of the German people, this book tells a very different story of the twentieth century. Ute Frevert reveals how emotions have shaped and influenced not only individuals but entire societies. Politicians use emotions, and institutions frame them, while social movements work with and through them. Ute Frevert's engaging analysis of twenty essential and powerful emotions – including anger, grief, hate, love, pride, shame and trust – explores how emotions coloured major events and developments from the German Empire to the Federal Republic until this very day. Emotions also have a history, illustrated by the changing forms, meanings and atmosphere of various emotions in twentieth-century Germany: for example, hate was a driving force behind National Socialism but is out of place in a democracy. Around 1900, people associated practices with love or nostalgia that do not resonate with us today. Showcasing why Germans were enthusiastic about the war in 1914 and proud of their national football team in 2006, this book highlights the historical power of emotions as much as their own historicity.
Introduction: the power of emotions in German history; Anger; Belonging; Curiosity; Disgust; Empathy; Envy; Fear; Fondness; Grief; Hate; Honour; Hope; Humility; Joy; Love; Nostalgia; Pride; Shame; Solidarity; Trust.
Explores the emotional worlds of the German people to tell a very different story of the 20th century.
Ute Frevert is Director of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, and President of the Max Weber Foundation. Until 2007, she was Professor of German history at Yale University. She is a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy and has been awarded the German Order of Merit for her international contribution to modern social, cultural and political history.
'Ute Frevert's new book is an encyclopaedic history of the social
and cultural framing of emotions. It is an entrancing and lively
account of the power of emotions to change worlds. A 'must read'
for anyone curious about lived, felt experiences in the twentieth
century.' Joanna Bourke, Birkbeck, University of London
'Written by one of the world's leading historians of Germany at the
top of her game, Ute Frevert's The Power of Emotions is an
unusually marvellous and a marvellously unusual book. This book
looks at German history from about 1900 onwards through the prism
of 20 emotions. Every chapter on an emotion is a kind of tour down
120 years of German memory lane, furnishing highly original
re-readings through a history of emotions lens.' Jan Plamper,
University of Limerick
'In this elegantly written book, Ute Frevert demonstrates how
emotions make history and are also made by history. She analyses
twenty different emotions from anger to nostalgia and from disgust
to pride and uses them to shine a light on the five political
regimes of twentieth-century Germany.' Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly,
University of Oxford
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |