Sunday, September 27, 2009
Radical Changes: An insight of the Peasants and Politcs in Germany, 1871-1914
David Blackbourn’s article “Peasants and Politics in Germany, 1871-1914” is an interesting article about Germany’s people and politics. He discusses how Germany has gone through significant changes from the nineteenth to the twentieth century. Blackbourn mentions several important changes and perceptions he found important while describing peasant life during this period. An important perception Blackbourn mentions was how Germany was predominantly rural and agricultural society during the nineteenth century and became an industrial society in the twentieth. I think Blackbourn thoroughly described the changes that occurred in four key aspects. The first aspect he discusses was how the rural society was simple and election participation were low to an extremely “political, co-operative, educational, recreational and enthusiastic election participation.” The second aspect was the economic changes which affected the German rural society after the 1870s threaten the Junkers while opening up opportunity to the peasantry. For example, the depression on grain prices allowed peasants to take advantage of the low prices rather than challenging the Junkers. The third aspect was the peasant’s dissatisfaction with the governmental institutions that were supposedly representing for ‘the corporate interests of agriculture,’ but rather were plotting political agendas in the 1880s. Blackbourn states an example, “… over the ostensibly less contentious issue of breeding policy, the lager landowners showed a keen interest in military and race horses, while the peasantry were more concerned with working animals.” The fourth aspect was the established parties that apparently closed the gap between themselves and the angry rural population. Blackbourn describes that the, “come-back of the old parties after the mid-1890s should ultimately be seen, in this perspective, as a provisional achievement.” I think that Blackbourn description of the peasantry life through the 1870s, 80s and 90s was extremely difficult due to the rapid differences from societal change from rural to urban.
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You bring up the shift from an agricultural to industrial society, something that must be considered in any discussion of Germany and its developments. While all European nations experienced this transition, perhaps no other nation went through it as quickly or as thoroughly as Germany. From a backwards agricultural nation, Germany became a major industrial power capable of threatening British dominance. Experiencing such a major change so quickly certainly affects a nation's development.
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