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9780191792786

Purging the Empire Mass Expulsions in Germany, 1871-1914

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780191792786

  • ISBN10:

    0191792780

  • Format: eBook
  • Copyright: 2015-02-01
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Summary

While the fate of minorities under Nazism is well known, the earlier expulsions of Germany's unwanted residents are less well understood. Against a backdrop of raging public debate, and numerous claims of a 'state of exception', tens of thousands of vulnerable people living in the German Empire were the victims of mass expulsion orders between 1871 and 1914. Groups as diverse as Socialists, Jesuits, Danes, colonial subjects, French nationalists, Poles, and 'Gypsies' were all removed, under circumstances that varied from police actions undertaken by provincial governors through to laws authorising removals passed by the Reichstag.

Purging the Empire examines the competing voices demanding the removal or the preservation of suspect communities, suggesting that these expulsions were enabled by the decentralised and participatory nature of German politics. In a surprisingly responsive political system, a range of players, including the Kaiser, the Reichstag, the bureaucracy, provincial officials, and local police authorities were all empowered to authorise the expulsion of unwanted residents. Added to this, the German press, civic associations, chambers of commerce, public intellectuals, religious societies, and the grassroots membership of political parties all played an important role in advocating or denouncing the measures before, during and after their implementation. Far from revealing the centrality of authoritarian caprice, Germany's mass expulsions point to the diffuse nature of coercive sovereign power and the role of public pressure in authorising or censuring the removals that took place in a modern, increasingly parliamentary Rechtsstaat.

Author Biography


Matthew P. Fitzpatrick is Associate Professor in International History at Flinders University. He is the author of Liberal Imperialism in Germany (2008) and the editor of Liberal Imperialism in Europe (2012). He has also written on aspects of imperialism in Europe and ancient Rome.

Table of Contents


Preface
Introduction
Part One - Democratic Expulsions
1. The Road Not Taken: Germany's Penal Colony Debate
2. The 'Jesuit Menace' of 1872
3. 'Class Justice': The Expulsion of Socialists and the 'Minor State of Siege'
Part Two - State-Based Expulsions
4. Poles and the Demographic Threat to Prussia
5. A Question of Motivation: Expelling Jews or Anti-Semitic Expulsions?
6. The Legacy of Gravenstein: Expelling the Danes from Schleswig
7. The 'Gypsy Plague' in Bavaria and Beyond
Part Three - Extra-Constitutional Expulsions
8. French Revanchism and the Boulangist Threat in Alsace- Lorraine
9. Stabilising the Empire: Expulsions in German Southwest Africa
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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