"Mary Nolan's keenly awaited book on rationalization is a timely
reminder that economics is too important to be left to the
economists alone...The book shows beautifully the necessary
interrelationship of business history, labor history, and women's
history for an understanding of this complex field of questions,
and makes an unanswerable case for the mainstreaming of the
concerns pioneered during the last two decades by women's
history."--Geoff Eley,
Department of History, University of Michigan
"An excellent economic, political, social, and cultural history of
how Weimar Germany "Germanized" its perceptions of Americanism both
conceptually and in practice."--CHOICE
"Nolan's nuanced attention to the class politics and conflicts
underlying the reception of Americanism and the articulation of
German rationalization prompts an important rethinking and
rewriting of the dramatic story of labor and capital during the
Weimar Republic. Nolan offers compelling insights...Nolan's
excellent study offers rich and persuasive evidence that
rationalization created new divisions within the German working
class while intensifying old
ones...[A] notable expansion of the still-underdeveloped field of
German gender history...it is certain to become a classic for a
wide audience of historians."--International Labor and Working
Class History
"With the wealth of information it contains on a fascinating,
albeit ultimately ill-fated, attempt at modernization, the book
will be a valuable resource for students of German history,
culture, and politics."--Journal of Modern History
"[A] fascinating read. [The book] represents an exciting approach
to history writing that escapes easy categorization and that
illuminates interconnections and intersections among the realms of
economy, society, politics, and culture..."--Central European
History
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