Global Germany Circa 1800

A Revisionist Literary History

Todd Kontje author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press

Publishing:17th Jun '25

£49.95

This title is due to be published on 17th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Global Germany Circa 1800 cover

Global Germany Circa 1800 asks two interrelated questions: How did Germans participate in the European conquest of the world, and how were they different from other imperial powers? In other words, what is the relation between the German form of empire, the old Reich, and the modern European empires that emerged in the global age?

In this book, Todd Kontje presents a revisionist literary and intellectual history, inviting readers to consider how we might understand “Germany” at the turn of the nineteenth century if we remove the nation-state as the inevitable goal of cultural and political development. Focusing on the pivotal years around 1800, when many of the concepts that define the modern era first came into being, Kontje investigates how thinkers in and around Weimar—from Goethe, Schiller, and Kant to Georg Forster, Heinrich von Kleist, and Alexander von Humboldt—worked within existing political structures to make sense of the region’s place in the world. Ultimately, he reveals how Weimar, a remote artist hub long thought to exemplify the insularity of a soon-to-be-unified nation, was in fact utterly worldly, and in a manner very different from the political capitals of imperial nation-states like London and Paris.

Accessible and entertaining, this literary history is essential reading for German studies students and scholars, and it will appeal to audiences in world history, empire studies, intellectual history, and comparative literature.

“Kontje shows how writers of the German eighteenth century came to an increasingly global understanding of the world organized around ideas of mobility and motion. He thereby foregrounds specific genres and formats (travel writing, autobiography, collected works editions, etc.) that ‘centrifugally’ directed eighteenth-century readers out toward the world in contrast to the ‘centripetal’ pull of works projecting a more limited idea of national culture.”

—Sean B. Franzel, co-editor of Taking Stock: Media Inventories in the German Nineteenth Century


“Todd Kontje’s Global Germany Circa 1800 is a wide-ranging and meticulously researched work that demonstrates the degree to which German writers of the age were implicated in and reflecting on globalization and its problems. Shaped by the legacy of the Holy Roman Empire, their views on such issues as imperialism, revolution, and ecological destruction offer promising historical alternatives to proposals that emerged in advanced European nation-states, such as France and England.”

—Peter Gilgen, author of Lektüren der Erinnerung: Lessing, Kant, Hegel

ISBN: 9780271099668

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm

Weight: 145g

266 pages