Book contents
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Jewish Gaze – Plural and Unique
- Part I Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
- Part II Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
- 4 Pogroms and Revolution
- 5 Germany’s Entangled Modernities
- 6 Unification as Rupture
- Part III Living in Germany: 1870–1930
- Part IV A Lost Homeland: 1930–2000
- Epilogue: Berlin is not Weimar
- Index
4 - Pogroms and Revolution
from Part II - Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2024
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Jewish Gaze – Plural and Unique
- Part I Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
- Part II Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
- 4 Pogroms and Revolution
- 5 Germany’s Entangled Modernities
- 6 Unification as Rupture
- Part III Living in Germany: 1870–1930
- Part IV A Lost Homeland: 1930–2000
- Epilogue: Berlin is not Weimar
- Index
Summary
Beginning in 1840, the acceptance of emancipation among liberals became more general, no doubt, but still remained deeply ambivalent. The chapter uses the example of Baden to show this fact and moves from there to the early stages of the 1848 Revolution, during which pogroms against Jews, first in the French provinces along the border with Germany and then within Germany itself, gradually spread across the country. Once again, the fate of the Jews represented the duality of the overall German situation. Meanwhile, efforts to formulate a new constitution at the Paulskirche did indeed grant full emancipation to the Jews, but soon suffered the fate of the rest of the liberal constitution, with the collapse of the revolution. The Prussian king refused to cooperate with the revolutionaries, but even more important for their final collapse was their own weakness vis-à-vis the forces of reaction and the inner split among them due to their inability to reconcile liberalism, democracy, and nationalism.
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- Germany through Jewish EyesA History from the Eighteenth Century to the Present, pp. 63 - 77Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024