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*CFP: German Studies Association (2019 Conference), Panel on: The Legacy of
Weimar’s “Conservative Revolution” (Deadline 26 January 2019)*


The Legacy of Weimar’s “Conservative Revolution”

Forty-Third Annual Conference of the German Studies Association

Oct. 3-6, 2019, Portland, Oregon

Organizers: Eliah Bures and Göran Dahl



Weimar’s so-called “Conservative Revolution” has often (and rightly) been
blamed for helping to prepare the cultural and intellectual ground for the
radical ultra-nationalism that culminated in Hitler’s Third Reich. More
often writers and academics than traditional political actors, the most
prominent Conservative Revolutionaries—figures such as Carl Schmitt, Ernst
Jünger, Martin Heidegger, Hans Freyer, Arthur Moeller van den Bruck, Ernst
Niekisch, Oswald Spengler, and Hans Zehrer—issued despairing diagnoses of
the ills of liberal society. They also pined openly for a new order that
would restore the authority, faith, and rootedness they believed had been
destroyed by the advent of modernity. Equally estranged from Wilhelmine
conservatism and Weimar democracy, they were spokesmen for a creed perhaps
best characterized as “radical conservatism” or “intellectual fascism.”



We invite proposals for a panel (or possibly two) devoted to the post-1945
legacy of Weimar’s Conservative Revolution. We are especially interested in
papers which explore the Conservative Revolution’s political and
intellectual influence in light of the current right-wing resurgence taking
place across the West. Contributions are welcome from scholars working
across a range of disciplines, including political history, cultural and
intellectual history, literary studies, film and media studies, sociology,
and political theory. Please note that while some Conservative
Revolutionaries certainly joined the NSDAP, the legacy of Nazism per se is
outside the panel’s scope.



Possible topics include, but are not limited to:


-The continuing intellectual influence on the post-1945 radical right of
figures like Schmitt, Spengler, Heidegger, and Jünger

-The development of the European New Right, especially in German-speaking
lands and under the influence of post-1945 writers and publicists who
looked to Weimar’s Conservative Revolution (e.g., Armin Mohler)

-Media and cultural strategies, provocation, “metapolitics” in theory and
practice, the relationship between right-wing politics and the arts

-Specific publications and publishers: Wir Selbst, Sezession, Antaios,
Junge Freiheit, Arktos, etc.

-New Right figures in Germany and Austria—for example, Botho Strauss,
Dieter Stein, Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, Ernst Nolte, Götz Kubitschek, Henning
Eichberg—but also perhaps figures from elsewhere, such as Alain de Benoist
or Alexander Dugin, who are indebted to Weimar’s Conservative Revolution.

-Continuity or change in radical conservative ideology across the 1945
watershed; the survival of radical conservative thinking in the German
*Kulturraum* after 1945

-The origins and spread of “identitarianism”

-The relationship between the far right as an intellectual movement and
far-right political parties



Please send questions and abstracts (of 350-500 words, accompanied by a
brief bio) to *both *Eliah Bures ([log in to unmask]) and Göran Dahl (
[log in to unmask]) no later than *January 26, 2019*.



For additional information about the German Studies Association conference,
please visit: https://www.thegsa.org/conference/current-conference

-- 
Eliah M. Bures, Ph.D.
Book Review Editor, H-Ideas
Visiting Scholar, Rhetoric Department, UC Berkeley (2018-2019)
IE-Berkeley International Postdoctoral Fellow (2014-2017)

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