Non-Fiction Books:

Weimar Communism as Mass Movement 1918-1933

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Paperback / softback
$80.00
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Description

Now a quarter of a century after the opening of the archives in Berlin and Moscow, the role of the German Communist Party (KPD) has been the subject of a new wave of studies. With this book, this new field of scholarship will be available in English for the first time. The book begins with the editors’ comprehensive contextualisation of the KPD within the history of the ill-fated Weimar Republic, as well its location within the Moscow-based Communist International (Comintern) thus bringing together the global and the `local’. In the rest of the book, authors offer a flavour of the rich texture of the world of German Communism. Attention is given to the party’s revolutionary origins in 1918/19, accounting for the importance of not only Rosa Luxemburg’s Spartacus League, but also the `Left Radicals’, whose stronghold was Bremen and north-western Germany. The policy dilemmas of being a mass party in Germany are then elucidated, but ultimately, the party’s fate and its policy-making were dominated by Moscow in the process known as `Stalinisation’, which neared completion by the end of the 1920s. However, this volume also includes a detailed appraisal of left-wing Communists’ opposition to Stalin and Stalinisation, as well as the party’s changing relationship with the SPD-led trade unions. A section in the volume presents new research on how German communism aspired to reach beyond its core support among the working class by examining its overtures to peasants, avant-garde artists, pacifists and prominent left-wing personalities outside the party’s ranks. Finally, an account of Stalin’s own betrayal of German communism is offered after the Nazis’ `seizure of power’ in 1933. This book represents essential reading for academic, undergraduate and general readers interested in twentieth German history and politics and the interwar communist movement. With thanks to the Nina Fishman translation award run by the Amiel Melburn Trust.

Author Biography:

Ralf Hoffrogge is postdoctoral research fellow at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum (Germany), focussing on the German and European labour movement, including Labour and Socialist parties as well as German Communism and trade unions. His ongoing research is a comparative study of German and British metalworker’s unions in the twentieth century. Norman LaPorte is Reader in History at the University of South Wales. His research is (mainly) on German communism and (with Stefan Berger) British relations with the former communist German Democratic Republic.
Release date NZ
November 13th, 2017
Audience
  • Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Contributors
  • Edited by Norman LaPorte
  • Edited by Ralf Hofrogge
Pages
276
ISBN-13
9781910448984
Product ID
34670733

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