@inbook{10.3138/j.ctt1287rd9.7, ISBN = {9780802094193}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3138/j.ctt1287rd9.7}, abstract = {Questions about political fairness and personal honour have always intertwined in the German authoritarian imagination. To begin the discussion of how this intertwining shaped the political agendas of the German Right in the nineteenth century, we might consider ‘the ancient opinions and rules of life,’ whose imminent demise pained the English conservative Edmund Burke more than two hundred years ago. This discussion in turn argues for a narrowing of focus, to take in not the German Right as a whole but those social and political groups to which Burke principally directed his message: aristocrats and conservatives.It has been said}, bookauthor = {James Retallack}, booktitle = {The German Right, 1860?1920: Political Limits of the Authoritarian Imagination}, pages = {35--75}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, title = {Habitus and Hubris}, year = {2006} }