
Dueling
Description
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The author employs a wealth of anecdotes to re-create the dueling event in all its variety, from the level of insult--which could range from loudly ridiculing a man's choice of entrée in an upscale restaurant to, more commonly, bedding his wife--to such intricacies as the time and place of the duel, the guest list, the selection of weapons and number of paces, dress options, and the decision regarding when to let the attending physician set up his instruments on the field. As he exposes the reader to the fierce mentality behind these proceedings, McAleer describes the duel as a litmus test of courage, the masculine apotheosis, which led its male practitioners to lay claim to both psychic and legal entitlements in Wilhelmine society. The aristocratic nature of the duel, with its feudal ethos of chivalry, gave its upper-middle-class practitioners even more opportunity to distinguish themselves from the underclasses and other marginalized groups--such as Socialists, Jews, left-liberals, Catholics, and pacifists, who, for various reasons, were stigmatized as incapable of "giving satisfaction." The duel, according to McAleer, was thus a social mirror, and the dueling issue political dynamite.
Throughout these accounts, the author sustains a personal voice to convey the horror and fascination of what at first appears to be simply a curious fringe activity, but which he goes on to reveal as an integral element of German society's consciousness in the late nineteenth century. In so doing, he strengthens the argument that Germany followed a path of development separate from the rest of Europe, leading to World War I and ultimately to Hitler and the Nazis.
Originally published in 1994.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
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Content
Acknowledgments
Introduction 3
I The Last Imperial Knights 11
Origins 12
The Legal and Political Setting 23
The Social Dimension 34
II Cowards Die a Thousand Times 43
Codes, Insults, and Challenges 45
Preliminary Events 53
The Pistol Duel 64
III Theirs Not to Reason Why 85
The Courts of Honor: 1808-1897 86
Trial and Error 99
The Military Ethos 107
IV Graduation with Honor 119
The Mensur 120
Scholars, Officers, and Other Gentlemen 127
Student Honor: Masculinity as Social Status 137
V Les Belles Dames Sans Merci 159
That Certain Type of Insult 161
Sexual Honor 169
Effi Briest and Cecile 178
VI And Death Shall Have No Dominion 183
Conclusion 196
List of Abbreviations 213
Notes 215
Bibliography 255
Index 263
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