Jews and the German state : the political history of a minority, 1848-1933

Bibliographic Information

Jews and the German state : the political history of a minority, 1848-1933

Peter Pulzer

(Jewish society and culture)

Blackwell, 1992

Available at  / 23 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [351]-359

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

"Jews and the German State" is the first political and cultural history of the Jewish community in Germany in its golden age and its decline, between the revolution of 1848 and the coming to power of Hitler in 1933. More than a pre-history of the Holocaust, this is a study of a minority group addressing the key questions concerning the cultural and political roles of minorities and their place in modern society. Pulzer's history of assimilation, emancipation and discrimination is aimed in particular at students and scholars of European history, political studies and sociology, but may also be enjoyed by the general reader with an interest in this historical period.

Table of Contents

  • Conservatives and radicals before 1848
  • 1848-1859 - revolution and reaction
  • the liberal epoch
  • Bismarck's change of course and the rise of anti-Semitism
  • Jews and the State 1893-1914
  • Jews and the bourgeois political parties
  • Jews and the socialist movement
  • Jews, public opinion, pressure groups and government policy
  • the First World War
  • the Revolution 1918-1919
  • Jews and the Weimar parties
  • Jews and the State 1918-1933
  • the revolution in the party structure 1930-1933
  • the electoral stance of the Jews 1930-1933.

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