1st Edition

The Radical Right in Germany 1870 to the Present

By Lee Mcgowan Copyright 2002
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Radical Right has represented a major element in German politics and society throughout the history of the united country (i.e. since the 1870s), though the understandable concentration on the Third Reich (1933-45) has tended to distort the wider picture.

    This book explores the history of the radical right through the full span of Germany's life as a nation, thus putting the Third Reich in its natural context, and also emphasising that the attitudes and policies of the radical right did not begin with Hitler's pursuit of power in the 1920s or end with his death in the ruins of Berlin.

    1  What is Right Wing Radicalism: A Definition 2  The Kaiserreich 1870-1918 3  1919-3 3: The Right in the Weimar Republic 4  Leadership and Ideology 5  Membership and Violence 6  National Socialist Germany 7  The Resurgence of the Radical Right in post-war Germany 8  Homeland and Hate: Neo-Nazism in Germany Conclusions

    Biography

    Lee McGowan is a Lecturer in European Studies at Queen's University, Belfast.