[6] October 3 - Beyond "the ideas of 1914"
Section outline
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Assigned reading:
"To the civilized world. An appeal" (1914) [Original German text.]
“Go ye and teach…” Budapesti Hírlap no. 248 (7 October 1914) [Original Hungarian text via Arcanum.]
S. Kotliarevskii, “War,” Journal of Philosophy and Psychology [Moscow] no.124 (September-October 1914), I-VII. [Original Russian text.]
Aleksej M. Rutkevic, "The ideas of 1914," Stud. East Eur. Thought (2014). [on-campus access only]
Additional resources:
Ernst Troeltsch, “On standards for assessing historical matters," Historische Zeitschrift 116 (1916): 1-47 (brief excerpts) [Original German text.]
Walther Schücking, Die deutschen Professoren und der Weltkrieg (1915).
Rudolf Kjellén, Die Ideen von 1914: Eine weltgeschichtliche Perspektive (1915).
Hermann Kellermann, Der Krieg der Geister (1915).
Hans Wehberg, Wider den Aufruf der 93! Das Ergebnis einer Rundfrage an die 93 Intellektuellen über die Kriegsschuld (1920). [available via North American VPN]
Anne Rasmussen, "Mobilizing minds," The Cambridge History of the First World War, vol. 3 (2013). [on-campus access only]
Tomasz Pudlocki and Kamil Ruszala, eds., Intellectuals and World War I: A Central European Perspective (2018). [940.3/1 PUD]
[click on image to enlarge] Caption: The War Poet
“Alright, we would at last appear to have the rhyme scheme for the first verse: …
[martial rhyming pairs]
Now it is just the rest of the connecting text that is lacking.”
Die Muskete [Vienna] (17 December 1914)