Struggle for Democracy in Germany
... Arbeiterschaft, Volk und Staat (Berlin-Wilmersdorf, n.d. [1928]), esp. 7–11. See also Kaiser to Giesberts, Imbusch, and Stegerwald, 17 Dec. 1928, BA Koblenz, NL Kaiser, 247. For further details, see Forster, Stegerwald, 464–69.
How did the prewar party prepare the ground for the dissolution of the labor movement in World War I, and for the subsequent extension of Leninism into Germany? To answer these questions is the purpose of Carl Schorske's study.
This is one of the most important books written on the history of our times.
In 1970, the Red Army Faction declared war on West Germany. The militants failed to bring down the state, but this book argues that the decade-long debate they inspired helped shape a new era.
How did a democratic government allow Adolf Hitler to seize power? In The Death of Democracy, Benjamin Carter Hett answers these questions, and the story he tells has disturbing resonances for our own time.
These editions are published unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural value.
The German Right, 1918–1930 sheds new light on this problem by examining the role that the non-Nazi Right played in the destabilization of Weimar democracy in the period before the emergence of the Nazi Party as a mass party of middle ...
A discerning statement about Germany and other nations, this book reevaluates for the general reader and the historian the impact of rapid industrialization, the origins of the world wars, the question of war guilt, the decade of Weimar ...
November 1932.
Barth, Boris. Dolchstoßlegenden und politische Desintegration: Das Trauma der deutschen Niederlage im Ersten Weltkrieg 1914–1933. Düsseldorf, 2003. Bartov, Omer. Hitler's Army: Soldiers, Nazis, andWar in the Third Reich. Oxford, 1992.