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The Consuming Temple Jews Department Stores And The Consumer Revolution In Germany 18801940 Paul Lerner

  • SKU: BELL-51934160
The Consuming Temple Jews Department Stores And The Consumer Revolution In Germany 18801940 Paul Lerner
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The Consuming Temple Jews Department Stores And The Consumer Revolution In Germany 18801940 Paul Lerner instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cornell University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.65 MB
Pages: 280
Author: Paul Lerner
ISBN: 9781501700125, 150170012X
Language: English
Year: 2015

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The Consuming Temple Jews Department Stores And The Consumer Revolution In Germany 18801940 Paul Lerner by Paul Lerner 9781501700125, 150170012X instant download after payment.

Department stores in Germany, like their predecessors in France, Britain, and the United States, generated great excitement when they appeared at the end of the nineteenth century. Their sumptuous displays, abundant products, architectural innovations, and prodigious scale inspired widespread fascination and even awe; at the same time, however, many Germans also greeted the rise of the department store with considerable unease. In The Consuming Temple, Paul Lerner explores the complex German reaction to department stores and the widespread belief that they posed hidden dangers both to the individuals, especially women, who frequented them and to the nation as a whole.Drawing on fiction, political propaganda, commercial archives, visual culture, and economic writings, Lerner provides multiple perspectives on the department store, placing it in architectural, gender-historical, commercial, and psychiatric contexts. Noting that Jewish entrepreneurs founded most German department stores, he argues that Jews and "Jewishness" stood at the center of the consumer culture debate from the 1880s, when the stores first appeared, through the latter 1930s, when they were "Aryanized" by the Nazis. German responses to consumer culture and the Jewish question were deeply interwoven, and the "Jewish department store," framed as an alternative and threatening secular temple, a shrine to commerce and greed, was held responsible for fundamental changes that transformed urban experience and challenged national traditions in Germany's turbulent twentieth century.

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