<p>Susan Crane's new study should be received with pleasure for a number of reasons. First, she addresses a period of literary-cultural history that is.... distinctly and undeservedly unfashionable. Second, she tackles it with admirable thoroughness and a good deal of subtlety, always remaining clearly focussed on her argument.... In short, it is a clear and intelligent attempt to demonstrate that, the more collectors (both as individuals and as groups) try to preserve the historical, the less likely people are to experience it with the freshness and spontaneity characteristic of the early collectors.</p>
- Helena Ragg-Kirkby, University of Leeds, Journal of Germanic Studies
<p>In her excellent book, Susan A. Crane traces the rise of historical consciousness in the first decades of the nineteenth-century Germany and shows how closely it was linked to the collecting activities of individuals and groups.... Crane's theoretical discussions will stimulate the philosophical debate about collecting.</p>
- Andreas Urs Sommer, University of Greifswald, German History
<p>Sensitive to the malleability of historical memory, Crane charts the evolution and impact of amateur historical consciousness in Germanic regions after Napoleon.... This is a difficult, but rewarding, deftly nuanced interpretation of the paths taken toward the creation of Germany's 'pasts.'</p>
Choice
<p>Susan A. Crane thoughtfully addresses a large theme in the intellectual and cultural history of Germany during the decades after the Napoleonic Wars: the growth of a new interest in the past and its relationship to the rise of nationalism.</p>
- Andrew Lees, Rutgers University, American Historical Review
<p>Susan A. Crane's study of historical artifact collecting in nineteenth-century Germany offers valuable insights for at least three widely diverse academic audiences... Thought-provoking.... Crane... has written a book of significant merit.</p>
- David McKibbin, University of Northern Iowa, History
<p>This is a knowing, intelligent book.</p>
- Christopher Clark, Times Literary Supplement
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Susan A. Crane is Associate Professor of Modern European History at the University of Arizona.