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Chapter 2
Society: Class, Gender, and National Identity
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Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)
Chapter (2/8)
Sources
Population Growth in Large Cities (1875–1910)
The “Feudalization of the Bourgeoisie?” Part I: Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad (1880)
Broadsheet for a Clerks’ Association (1890)
Hiking a Glacier (c. 1890)
Working-Class Life (1891)
Discussion between a Workers’ Committee and a Factory Owner (1891)
Cholera Epidemic in Hamburg (1892)
Mass Graves during the Cholera Epidemic (1892)
A General Assembly of German Israelites (1893)
Helene Stöcker, “The Modern Woman” (1893)
Prominent Voices in the German Women’s Movement (c. 1895)
Käthe Kollwitz, Misery (1895-96)
Gender and Occupation in Selected Industries (1895 and 1907)
Walther Rathenau, “Hear, O Israel!” (1897)
Eugen Richter on the German Nobility (1898)
An Omnibus in Berlin (1898)
Dancing School (c. 1899)
Dwelling and Domesticity (1899)
Depopulation of the Countryside (1900)
Gängeviertel in Hamburg (c. 1900)
The Corner of Unter den Linden and Friedrichstraße (after 1905)
Otto Gierke on the Relationship between the Individual and the Community (1902)
Rural Hygiene (1902)
The Ratskeller in Dresden (1903)
Separate Stairways for Different Social Classes (1903)
Recorded Speech by Emperor Wilhelm II, “Showing Strength in the Face of Pain” (January 24, 1904)
Ernst Goldmann on the Legal Status of Women and Whether a Husband Has the Right to Beat His Wife (1904)
Poverty among the Rural Elderly (1906)
Group Photograph of the Maccabee Fraternity in Berlin (c. 1906)
A Jewish Student Fraternity (1913)
Association of German Retail Clerks, Leipzig Chapter (1906)
Industrial Unrest (1890–1913)
Census Figures (1882–1907)
“Come Forth, Ye Multitudes, to the Banks of the German Rhine” (1907)
A Sanatorium in the Harz Mountains (1907)
Soccer in Germany (1907)
Relay Race in Berlin (1908)
Performing Calisthenics at a Gymnastics Festival (June 6-9, 1911)
Consumerism: Berlin Department Stores (1908)
The Wertheim Department Store in Berlin (c. 1906)
Train Derailment (September 26, 1908)
Welcome Address at the Festival of Speaking Machines in the Year 2000 (1908)
Household Income and Expenses (1909)
Augustiner Brewery, Munich (c. 1910)
Three Generations of Workers (1910)
Working Class Quarters (c. 1910)
The Kitchen Staff (c. 1910)
A Female Mason Perched High above Berlin (c. 1910)
A Female Reportage Photographer Surveys Berlin (c. 1910)
Berlin Street Life (1910)
Farm Labor in Schleswig-Holstein (1911)
Parody The Women’s Rights Activist (1912)
A Peasant Family at Lunch (1912)
How Metalworkers c. 1910 Viewed Their Work (1912)
Patriotic Workers’ Song (1912)
Carnival Parade in Weimar (c. 1912-1914)
The Cinema (1913)
The Leilich Cinematograph (1907)
A Well-Ordered Grocery Store (1913)
On Controlling the Workforce (1915)
Workers Leaving the Leitz Factory (1915)
“The Suffragettes at the Front” (1915)
“Our Girls in Wartime” (1915)
Social Background of German Elites and Members of the Clergy (1800–1919)
Hermann Cohen, “Germanness and Jewishness“ [“Deutschtum und Judentum”] (1915)
The “Feudalization of the Bourgeoisie?” Part II: Heinrich Mann, The Loyal Subject [Der Untertan] (1918)
The Textile Workforce (1882–1925)
Elisabeth Flitner, “A Candle Was Burning on the Lectern Early in the Morning” (retrospective account, 1980s)
Kurt Karl Doberer, “The Pfennig Was the Heart of the Currency” (retrospective account, 1980s)
Economic Development
Arts and Culture, Mass Culture, and Reform Movements