Abbreviations
Introduction: The German Right in the Weimar
Republic: New Directions, New Insights, New Challenges
Larry Eugene Jones
Chapter 1. Hindenburg and the German Right
Wolfram Pyta
Chapter 2. From Friends to Foes: Count Kuno von
Westarp and the Transformation of the German Right
Daniela Gasteiger
Chapter 3. Conservative Antisemitism in the
Weimar Republic: A Case Study of the German National People’s
Party
Larry Eugene Jones
Chapter 4. Academics and Radical Nationalism:
The Pan-German League in Hamburg and the German Reich
Rainer Hering
Chapter 5. Realms of Leadership and Residues of
Social Mobilization: The Pan-German League, 1918-1933
Björn Hofmeister
Chapter 6. Continuity and Change on the German
Right: The Pan-German League and Nazism, 1918-1939
Barry A. Jackisch
Chapter 7. Weimar’s “Burning Question”:
Situational Antisemitism and the German Combat Leagues,
1918-1933
Brian E. Crimm
Chapter 8. Antisemitism and the “Jewish
Question” in the Political Worldview of the Catholic Right
Ulrike Ehret
Chapter 9. Eugenics and Protestant Social
Thought in the Weimar Republic: Friedrich von Bodelschwingh and the
Bethel Institutions
Edward Snyder
Chapter 10. Carl Schmitt and the Weimar
Right
Joseph W. Bendersky
Notes on Contributors
Select Bibliography of New and Standard Works on the History of the
German Right, 1918-1933
Index
Larry Eugene Jones is Professor of Modern European History at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York. He is a specialist in the history of the Weimar Republic and author of German Liberalism and the Dissolution of the Weimar Republic, 1918-1933 (University of North Carolina Press, 2011) and Hitler versus Hindenburg: The 1932 Presidential Elections and the End of the Weimar Republic (CUP, 2016). He is currently working on a new book tentatively entitled Conservatives, Nationalists, and Nazis: A History of the German Right from 1918 to 1933/34.
“The strength of this collection is its engagement with this ideological and institutional diversity… Though not intended for general readers (who will find relatively little about Hitler and the Nazis here), specialists will benefit from this volume’s exploration of the ideas that shaped the German Right and the ways that their spokesmen negotiated their ideological differences during a period of profound societal crisis.” • Choice “This volume is a very informative and comprehensive overview of Weimar Germany’s right-wing thought and politics outside of national socialism. Although written as distinct essays, the different chapters complement each other significantly, making a consecutive reading of the volume worthwhile. The essays themselves are strong, and put together in this way create a coherent and cogent narrative.” • Canadian Journal of History “Even if not all new directions offered [by the ten interesting and well-written essays in this collection]… are ultimately completely convincing, the book certainly reaches the goal stated in the introduction of delivering valuable new insights and pointing out new challenges.” • German History “The essays, exceptionally readable throughout, enrich the contemporary debate through numerous new facets and questions. In contrast to other edited volumes, the contributions here are all based on rich source material, which results in a book that is interesting for the general historian as well as for the specialist.” • H-Soz-u-Kult “The individual chapters range in quality from good to excellent....[and offer] a judicious mix of work from prominent academics and younger scholars. The weighing up of continuities and discontinuities between the Right and Nazism is well considered and offers refreshingly new insights into the history of inter-war Germany.” • Conan Fischer, University of St. Andrews
Ask a Question About this Product More... |