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University of California Press

About the Book

The Emancipation of Writing is the first study of writing in its connection to bureaucracy, citizenship, and the state in Germany. Stitching together micro- and macro-level analysis, it reconstructs the vibrant, textually saturated civic culture of the German southwest in the aftermath of the French Revolution and Napoleon's invasions. Ian F. McNeely reveals that Germany's notoriously oppressive bureaucracy, when viewed through the writing practices that were its lifeblood, could also function as a site of citizenship. Citizens, acting under the mediation of powerful local scribes, practiced their freedoms in written engagements with the state. Their communications laid the basis for civil society, showing how social networks commonly associated with the free market, the free press, and the voluntary association could also take root in powerful state institutions.

About the Author

Ian F. McNeely is Assistant Professor at the University of Oregon.

Table of Contents

Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction

PART I
OFFICIAL POWER AND THE PAPER TRAIL

Chapter 1 The civic landscape
Political culture
Social geography
Mediating institutions

Chapter 2 The tutelage of the scribes
The formality of daily life
Manipulations of authority
Crisis in the writing trades

Chapter 3 The Black Forest Cahier
Political ventriloquism
Networks of collegiality
Provincials and cosmopolitans
A breach of protocol

Chapter 4 Constitutional fetishism
Litigating local conflict
Democratization by codification
Heinrich Bolley v. the king
Epilogue

PART II
INSCRIBING A SPACE OF FREEDOM

Chapter 5 Transcending ""textual serfdom""
Administrative colonization
Tutelage on a new terrain
The reconstitution of politics

Chapter 6 Reading, writing, and reform
Edicts: the letter of the law
Sociography and enforcement
Knowledge entrepreneurs

Chapter 7 Cataloging the social world
Statistical topography
Patriotic science
Encyclopedism as local passion

Chapter 8 The intelligence gazettes
Popular Enlightenment
Reaching the citizenry
The market for information

Conclusion
Abbreviations
Glossary
Sources
Notes

Reviews

“Groundbreaking. . . . A genial contribution to the current scholarship of German culture and society.”
European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms
"A superbly crafted major intervention into the hotly contested issue of German civil society - its origins, formation, and fate. McNeely turns the tables on deconstructive approaches to formalism in writing and shows how writing was thoroughly implicated in state power and corporate culture."—David Sabean, author of Kinship in Neckarhausen, 1700-1870

"This work's use of archival evidence to overhaul grand theory puts it in a league of its own. McNeely crafts a startlingly original argument about the inventions of citizenship and of modern political culture. It will be required if unsettling reading for anyone pondering the legacies of Tocqueville, Habermas, or Foucault."—Richard Biernacki, author of The Fabrication of Labor: Germany and Britain, 1640-1914