A Mighty Fortress: A New History of the German People

by Steven Ozment

Paperback, 2005

Language

Publication

Harper Perennial (2005), Edition: Reprint, 416 pages

Description

A sweeping, original and provocative history of the German people, from antiquity to the present

User reviews

LibraryThing member iftyzaidi
By attempting to cover over 2000 years of history in just over 300 pages, Harvard historian Steven Ozment set himself a daunting task, one that was never going to satisfy every kind of reader. The need to compress so much history means leaving a great deal out, assuming some basic prior knowledge
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on the part of the reader, and focusing on cultural and intellectual trends and themes rather than mere politics and battles. The result is surprisingly effective, as long as the reader does not approach the book with false expectations.

Ozment is a fine writer, whose previous work has tended to focus on social history in Early Modern Germany. This gives him a perspective that allows him to get away from the clichéd approach to German history which sees it always through the prism of the Nazi era. As he points out in a substantial introductory chapter where he discusses the historiography of Germany, far too often “a tour of German history can be a circular journey around a magnetic Nazi pole, mesmerizing the general public and distracting historians and politicians eager to move on. This enduring perspective has also turned Germany’s pre-twentieth-century past into a hunting ground for fascist forerunners and defeated democratic alternatives to the absolute territorial state.” At the same time, neither can any single segment of history be singled out as an aberration, a fateful and atavistic detour from an otherwise straightforward journey of progressive liberalism, as some would like to see it. Again, as Ozment reminds us, no one “doubts that the past casts powerful shadows on the present, and more recent decades more powerful ones.” Ozment’s own approach is to write history “from past to present, not from present to past”.

In attempting to create a “reliable history” that does this, Ozment has fashioned a readable, informative, and insightful book. One may not always agree with all of his interpretations, but there is much food for thought here. Perhaps the best sections are those on the Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties, and on the stretch of history from Frederick the Great to Bismarck. There is also a lengthy and intriguing discussion of Luther and the effect of the Reformation on German society, but this was, at least to my mind, somewhat undermined by a lack of factual details concerning the period. It was sometimes difficult to follow discussions of Luther’s ideas about social hierarchies, peasant-lord relations and the treatment of Jews, when the events alluded to were not described or narrated. I can see similar complaints arising about the Nazi period, though given my own background knowledge about that era, I didn’t find it a problem there.

This brings me back to the point about reader expectations. My guess is that readers who already have some familiarity with German history are the ones who are going to get the most out of this book. Those readers who are looking for a narrative history, which lays out the basic timeline of political and intellectual events, will probably be disappointed. Want to know how World War 2 was fought and lost? How Prussia went about uniting the German states into a unified German Reich? Germany’s role in dragging Europe into the First World War? Why the Berlin Wall fell? These events are merely alluded to here or discussed in only the most general terms. True, one does not need to know about these events in detail to get something out of this book, but some readers may specifically be looking for these explanations. Another issue is that one becomes increasingly aware that there is a great deal of history being completely ignored. The high Medieval period seems to get a particularly bum deal. While one can understand the need to pick and choose from the wealth of material available, did so much time have to be spent discussing Luther, his theology and its vision of the ideal civil society?

These caveats aside, there is much to enjoy and mull over here for even a casual history buff. The writing is fluid and a pleasure to read – no dull, dust-dry tome this. For those looking for an intelligent overview of the history of the German people, this is a fine place to look.
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LibraryThing member GeoKaras
Good general history of the German people. Suitable as a survey, but lacking in details.
LibraryThing member gmicksmith
One of the best surveys of German history and contains interesting details and compelling prose. Ozment writes in a lively, engaging style and manages to find insights throughout German history. If you are reading one general survey text this should be high on your list.
LibraryThing member FKarr
history of the German peoples from Roman times to the present; rather patchy in content and quality; skips huge chunks of time; very superficial on some subjects, while detailed and articulate on others
LibraryThing member ddonahue
Chapter 7 especially well describes the evolution of German thought: from the dualistic view of man implicit in Luther's dilemma through the "classical" discussion of the duality of may raided in "Dr. Faust", continuing through the German Idealists Kant, then Hegel, then Feuerbach's criticism of
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individualism in Christian thought described in "The Essence of Christianity," on to Marx's more harsh (and politicized) condemnation of individualism, the underlying premise of Christianity, whose ultimate end is property and the depersonalization of mankind. Similar currents in philosophy regarding the inclusion of God into man's mind...essentially making God a construction of man, even Luther's intimation that the mind open to God will hear God, used to justify the premise that God is a mental construct. Finally the apotheosis a la Nietsche, of a Superman. Culturally, analogous to the super Volk.
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LibraryThing member JVioland
A disappointment. Not much here.
LibraryThing member mykl-s
Three hundred odd pages of text can't fully cover two millennia of history, but Ozment makes interesting the topics he chooses to write about. I learned how germanic tribes were sometimes courted by and sometimes taken advantage of by the Romans, the importance of Martin Luther, how the French
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revolution affected Germans, why the Germans did not really have their own revolution, what post cold war reunification was like, and much much more. Also, I learned the difference between historiography and history and why it is important.
The pages, like many history books, are long on rulers, battles, regime changes, and short on what was happening to ordinary people, leaving me wondering what really changed and what didn't sometimes.
There are interesting references to the history of ideas, including a chapter about nineteenth century philosophers and political thinkers. Hitler and the Nazi's got their chapter, one that explained much to me.
I was looking for a book that especially clarified early germanic history as well as the last two centuries, and this one filled the bill. The fourteen page introduction is worth reading on its own.
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Original language

English

Physical description

416 p.; 6.11 inches

ISBN

0060934832 / 9780060934835
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