43 research outputs found

    Constantin Frantz and the intellectual history of Bonapartism and Caesarism: a reassessment

    Get PDF
    The conservative German publicist and political theorist, Constantin Frantz (1817-1891), occupies an ambiguous place in German intellectual history. Some, such as Friedrich Meinecke, located him within the rich intellectual tradition of German federalism, highlighting his hostility to the idea of the “nation-state” and the traditions of nationalism, Realpolitik and militarism. Others, by contrast, have situated him within a long genealogy of German fascism, identifying his remarkable 1852 work, Louis Napoleon, as a kind of precursor or antecedent of twentieth-century fascist ideology. This interpretation raises broader questions about the historiography on Bonapartism and Caesarism, which has often been motivated by an interest in the intellectual origins of modern fascism. The present article supplies a reinterpretation of Frantz’s thinking about Bonapartism (Napoleonismus) and Caesarism by focusing on a much broader range of his intellectual output and by tracking the development of his view of Bonapartism’s significance between 1851 and the early 1870s. The main outcome is not just to question Frantz’s place in the “prehistory” of fascism, but also to show how deeply nineteenth-century debates about Bonapartism were connected to concerns about liberalism, democracy, nationalism and imperialism

    Unsocial sociability in the Scottish enlightenment: Ferguson and Kames on war, sociability and the foundations of patriotism

    Get PDF
    This article reconstructs a significant historical alternative to the theories of ‘cosmopolitan’ or ‘liberal’ patriotism often associated with the Scottish Enlightenment. Instead of focusing on the work of Andrew Fletcher, Francis Hutcheson, David Hume or Adam Smith, this study concentrates on the theories of sociability, patriotism and international rivalry elaborated by Adam Ferguson (1723–1816) and Henry Home, Lord Kames (1696–1782). Centrally, the article reconstructs both thinkers' shared perspective on what I have called ‘unsociable’ or ‘agonistic’ patriotism, an eighteenth-century idiom which saw international rivalship, antagonism, and even war as crucial in generating political cohesion and sustaining moral virtue. Placing their thinking in the context of wider eighteenth-century debates about sociability and state formation, the article's broader purpose is to highlight the centrality of controversies about human sociability to eighteenth-century debates about the nature of international relations

    Aerodynamic Interactions of Reaction Control System Jets on Mars Entry Aeroshells

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/97062/1/AIAA2012-1013.pd

    Interactions of Single-Nozzle Supersonic Propulsive Deceleration Jets on Mars Entry Aeroshells

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90635/1/AIAA-2011-138-807.pd

    Investigations of Peripheral 4-Jet Sonic and Supersonic Propulsive Deceleration Jets on a Mars Science Laboratory Aeroshell

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90686/1/AIAA-2011-1036-531.pd

    Investigation of the Interactions of Reaction Control Systems with Mars Science Laboratory Aeroshell

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/83545/1/AIAA-2010-1558-704.pd
    corecore