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The Oxford Handbook of the Weimar Republic is a multi-author survey of German history from 1918 to 1933. Covering a broad range of topics in social, political, economic, and cultural history, it presents an overview of current scholarship, and will help students and teachers to make sense of the contradictions and complexities of Germany's experiments with democracy and modern society in this period. The contributions emphasize the historical openness of Germany's first republic, which was more than just the coming of the Third Reich. The thirty-three chapters, all written by leading experts,…mehr
The Oxford Handbook of the Weimar Republic is a multi-author survey of German history from 1918 to 1933. Covering a broad range of topics in social, political, economic, and cultural history, it presents an overview of current scholarship, and will help students and teachers to make sense of the contradictions and complexities of Germany's experiments with democracy and modern society in this period. The contributions emphasize the historical openness of Germany's first republic, which was more than just the coming of the Third Reich. The thirty-three chapters, all written by leading experts, contain information and interpretation based on cutting-edge scholarship, and together provides an unsurpassed panorama of the Weimar Republic.
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Nadine Rossol is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Essex. She is currently Deputy Dean of Partnerships, and has held fellowships at the University of Limerick and the Free University Berlin. Benjamin Ziemann is Professor of Modern Germany History at the University of Sheffield. He has held fellowships and visiting professorships at the University of Oslo, Humboldt University Berlin, the University of York, and the University of Tübingen.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: Nadine Rossol and Benjamin Ziemann: Introduction * Part I: Key Events and Political Developments * 2: Christopher Dillon: The German Revolution of 1918/19 * 3: Martin H. Geyer: The Period of Inflation, 1919-1923 * 4: Matthew Stibbe: Coalition-Building and Political Fragmentation, 1924-1930 * 5: Larry Eugene Jones: From Democracy to Dictatorship: The Fall of Weimar and the Nazi Rise to Power, 1930-33 * Part II: Polity, Politics, and Policies * 6: Peter C. Caldwell: The Weimar Constitution * 7: Erin Hochman: Nationalism and Nationhood * 8: Thomas Mergel: Elections, Election Campaigns, and Democracy * 9: Siegfried Weichlein: Federalism, Regionalism, and the Construction of Spaces * 10: Benjamin Ziemann: The Reichswehr and Armament Policies * 11: Jonathan Wright: Foreign Policy: The Dilemmas of a Revisionist State * 12: Nadine Rossol: Republican Groups, Ideas, and Identities * 13: Karl-Christian Führer: Social Policy in the Weimar Republic * Part III: Parties and their Constituencies * 14: Philipp Müller: Liberalism * 15: Joachim C. Häberlen: Social Democrats and Communists in Weimar Germany: A Divided Working-Class Movement * 16: Shelley Baranowski: The Centre Party, Conservatives, and the Radical Right * 17: Daniel Siemens: National Socialism * 18: Susanne Wein and Martin Ulmer: Antisemitism in the Weimar Republic * Part IV: Economy and Society * 19: Jan-Otmar Hesse and Christian Marx: The Overstretched Economy: Industry and Financial Services * 20: Moritz Föllmer: The Middle Classes * 21: Pamela Swett: The Industrial Working Class * 22: Benjamin Ziemann: Agriculture and Rural Society * 23: Ute Planert: Weimar Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Reproduction * 24: Mary Nolan: Transnational Visions of Modernity: America and the Soviet Union * 25: Sharon Gillerman: German Jews in the Weimar Republic * 26: Barbara Stambolis: Youth and Youth Movements: Relations, Challenges, Developments * Part V: Culture * 27: Jochen Hung: Mass Culture * 28: Helmuth Kiesel: German Literature 1918-1933 * 29: Beate Störtkuhl: Architecture, Town Planning and Large-Scale Housing Estates: Challenges, Visions, and Proposed Solutions * 30: Todd Weir and Udi Greenberg: Religious Cultures and Confessional Politics * 31: Lutz Raphael: The Humanities and Social Sciences * 32: Kerry Wallach: Visual Weimar: The Iconography of Social and Political Identities * 33: Claudia Siebrecht: The Presence of the First World War in Weimar Culture * Index
* 1: Nadine Rossol and Benjamin Ziemann: Introduction * Part I: Key Events and Political Developments * 2: Christopher Dillon: The German Revolution of 1918/19 * 3: Martin H. Geyer: The Period of Inflation, 1919-1923 * 4: Matthew Stibbe: Coalition-Building and Political Fragmentation, 1924-1930 * 5: Larry Eugene Jones: From Democracy to Dictatorship: The Fall of Weimar and the Nazi Rise to Power, 1930-33 * Part II: Polity, Politics, and Policies * 6: Peter C. Caldwell: The Weimar Constitution * 7: Erin Hochman: Nationalism and Nationhood * 8: Thomas Mergel: Elections, Election Campaigns, and Democracy * 9: Siegfried Weichlein: Federalism, Regionalism, and the Construction of Spaces * 10: Benjamin Ziemann: The Reichswehr and Armament Policies * 11: Jonathan Wright: Foreign Policy: The Dilemmas of a Revisionist State * 12: Nadine Rossol: Republican Groups, Ideas, and Identities * 13: Karl-Christian Führer: Social Policy in the Weimar Republic * Part III: Parties and their Constituencies * 14: Philipp Müller: Liberalism * 15: Joachim C. Häberlen: Social Democrats and Communists in Weimar Germany: A Divided Working-Class Movement * 16: Shelley Baranowski: The Centre Party, Conservatives, and the Radical Right * 17: Daniel Siemens: National Socialism * 18: Susanne Wein and Martin Ulmer: Antisemitism in the Weimar Republic * Part IV: Economy and Society * 19: Jan-Otmar Hesse and Christian Marx: The Overstretched Economy: Industry and Financial Services * 20: Moritz Föllmer: The Middle Classes * 21: Pamela Swett: The Industrial Working Class * 22: Benjamin Ziemann: Agriculture and Rural Society * 23: Ute Planert: Weimar Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Reproduction * 24: Mary Nolan: Transnational Visions of Modernity: America and the Soviet Union * 25: Sharon Gillerman: German Jews in the Weimar Republic * 26: Barbara Stambolis: Youth and Youth Movements: Relations, Challenges, Developments * Part V: Culture * 27: Jochen Hung: Mass Culture * 28: Helmuth Kiesel: German Literature 1918-1933 * 29: Beate Störtkuhl: Architecture, Town Planning and Large-Scale Housing Estates: Challenges, Visions, and Proposed Solutions * 30: Todd Weir and Udi Greenberg: Religious Cultures and Confessional Politics * 31: Lutz Raphael: The Humanities and Social Sciences * 32: Kerry Wallach: Visual Weimar: The Iconography of Social and Political Identities * 33: Claudia Siebrecht: The Presence of the First World War in Weimar Culture * Index
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