Foreword
Volker R. Berghahn
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Geoff Eley and James Retallack
Chapter 1. Making a Place in the Nation: Meanings of Citizenship in Wilhelmine Germany
Geoff Eley
Chapter 2. Membership, Organization, and Wilhelmine Modernism: Constructing Economic Democracy through Cooperation
Brett Fairbairn
Chapter 3. Few better farmers in Europe? Productivity, Change, and Modernization in East-Elbian Agriculture, 1870-1913
Oliver Grant
Chapter 4. The Wilhelmine Regime and the Problem of Reform: German Debates about Modern Nation-States
Mark Hewitson
Chapter 5. Lebensreform: A Middle-Class Antidote to Wilhelminism
Matthew Jefferies
Chapter 6. Imperial Socialism of the Chair: Gustav Schmoller and German Weltpolitik, 1897-1905
Erik Grimmer-Solem
Chapter 7. Our natural ally: German Social Democrats, Anglo-German Relations, and the Contradictory Agendas of Wilhelmine Socialism, 1897-1900
Paul Probert
Chapter 8. The Malet Incident, October 1895: A Prelude to the Kaiser's Kruger Telegram in the Context of the Anglo-German Imperialist Rivalry
Willem-Alexander van't Padje
Chapter 9. Colonial Agitation and the Bismarckian State: The Case of Carl Peters
Arne Perras
Chapter 10. The Law and the Colonial State: Legal Codification versus Practice in a German Colony
Nils Ole Oermann
Chapter 11. Max Warburg and German Politics: The Limits of Financial Power in Wilhelmine Germany
Niall Ferguson
Chapter 12. Continuity and Change in Post-Wilhelmine Germany: From the 1918 Revolution to the Ruhr Crisis
Conan Fischer
Chapter 13. A Wilhelmine Legacy? Coudenhove-Kalergi's Paneuropa as an Alternative Path towards a European (Post-)Modernity, 1922-1932
Katiana Orluc
Chapter 14. Ideas into Politics: Meanings of Stasis in Wilhelmine Germany
James Retallack
Notes on Contributors
List of Publications by Hartmut Pogge von Strandmann