Matthew Stibbe
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The German Revolution in European and global context
International and transnational perspectives
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This chapter investigates the impact of the turn to transnational and global methodologies on recent interpretations of the 1918–19 revolution in German and Anglo-American historiography. It focuses on the many entanglements and disconnects between events in Germany itself and new cross-border movements in the 1920s for decolonisation, Black liberation, women’s rights, gay rights, sex reform and bodily autonomy. It also highlights how comparative studies of political violence in Europe after the First World War have led to fresh interpretations of its role and significance in Germany in particular. A fourth section analyses the relevance of the recent controversy over Hedwig Richter’s 2020 book Demokratie: Eine deutsche Affäre (Democracy: A German Affair) to debates on 1918–19. At the end of the chapter, a case is made for seeing the revolution as a necessary part of Germany’s development as a liberal, open, equal, tolerant and postcolonial society in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century.

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