1st Edition

Revolutionary Refugees German Socialism in Britain, 1840-1860

By Christine Lattek Copyright 2006
    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    Tracing the development of German socialism in Britain and on the continent in the mid-nineteenth century, this is the first substantial study to combine two very important aspects: an analysis of this crucial stage in socialist political theory development and the examination of the social and cultural environment of this immigrant community.

    Combining these two key aspects, Christine Lattek places the development of exile politics in the overall framework of the flourishing German colony and in doing so fills an important gap in our understanding of the development of early German socialism.

    The result is an engaging and essential read for all students and researchers of modern history.

    Introduction: Socialism and Exile in the German Colony in Mid-Nineteenth Century London 1. The German Colony 2. The German Workers' Educational Society, 1840-1850 3. Between Democrats and Blanquists: The Communist League, 1849-1850 4. The 'Chronique Scandaleuse': Ruge, Klinkel and German democracy, 1849-1853 5. The Sonderbund I: The Willich-Schapper League as its zenith, 1850-1851 6. The Sonderbund II: Decline and dissolution of the Communist League, 1851-1853 7. Apathy and Revival: The international association, 1853-1859 8. The New Era, 1858-1860 9. Epilogue: From Exile to Colony: Class and the formation of community

    Biography

    Christine Lattek was educated at the universities of Berlin, Tübingen and Cambridge, where she recieved her PhD, in 1990 for her thesis on German Socialism in British Exile. She specialises in modern and contemporary German history, and has written on the nineteenth century German radical reform and feminist movements as well as on the Holocaust. She currently lives in London with three small children and works as a translator and editor.

    'By 1848 London had become a city of many refugees, many from radical uprisings or movements in Germany and France. Here Lattek describes the community of Germans that formed in London as the firestorms of 1848 flared, starting with the various organizations they forms strictly for themselves and then for others in the early years, followed by the growth of the Communist League and its demise only a few years later, a period of apathy following the collapse of several projects, and the rising perception that this was not exile but a colony. One of the most interesting ideas is that because the Germans were so insular, they made remarkably few inroads into the lives of ordinary English workers, a situation which became more complex as trade unionism became a major factor in English social and political life.'Reference & Research Book News