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Book Cover for: Property and Civil Society in South-Western Germany 1820-1914, Jonathan Sperber

Property and Civil Society in South-Western Germany 1820-1914

Jonathan Sperber

Historians have often employed the concept of civil society, an intermediary realm between the family and the state, to analyse nineteenth-century Europe and North America. They have concentrated on voluntary associations, the press and public meetings, the constituent elements of Jürgen Habermas's 'public sphere', in doing so overlooking a central element of nineteenth-century civil society: property and its disposition, whether within the family or in the marketplace.

This book examines the place of property in the society of south-western Germany during property's nineteenth-century golden age. It analyses the culture of property ownership and property transactions within families, among business partners and competitors, and among creditors and debtors. The work considers the boundaries of property, outlining relationships between neighbouring property owners, and showing how property ownership helped shape social distinctions between men and women, Christians and Jews, the upper and lower classes, the sane and the insane, and between honourable and dishonourable actions. It traces the development of property relations and property transactions from the end of the Napoleonic era to the eve of the First World War. The book's conclusion compares conditions in south-western Germany with those elsewhere in Europe and North America, and considers changes in property relations occurring in Germany during the age of total war and in the post-1945 period in the light of structures and developments in the nineteenth century.

Based on extensive documentation from civil court records, Property and Civil Society in South-Western Germany presents its results through the recounting of intriguing, sometimes bizarre, but always revealing stories of legal disputes. A reconsideration of the nature of civil society, an analysis of nineteenth-century social development and social conflict, a study of the nature and action of the law in everyday life, the book is also an ironic and bemused look at the past human condition.

Book Details

  • Publisher: OUP Oxford
  • Publish Date: Nov 24th, 2005
  • Pages: 295
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.21in - 6.14in - 0.69in - 1.30lb
  • EAN: 9780199284757
  • Categories: Europe - GermanySocial History

About the Author

Born in New York City, Jonathan Sperber was educated at Cornell University and the University of Chicago. He has taught at the University of Missouri for twenty years, and has been a fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung, and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

Praise for this book

"Jonathan Sperber offers a methodologically exemplary analysis of 1,646 civil law suits centered on property disputes that flared up in the nineteenth-century Bavarian Palatinate."--Journal of Modern History

"This important book casts light on myriad aspects of urban and rural everyday life in the long nineteenth century, and offers new perspectives on the nature of civil society and the constructedness of social values and social relations more generally....This well-researched and well-written work has something to offer almost all students of nineteenth-century Germany."--Brian Vick, Central European Studies

"An outsized contribution to current scholarship on civil society, constituting a masterful blend of methods and literatures from one of the field's leading scholars. It should stimulate discussion, invite comparison, and launch future research on 'property regimes' in modern civil society."--James M. Brophy