Why Hitler? : the genesis of the Nazi Reich
著者
書誌事項
Why Hitler? : the genesis of the Nazi Reich
Praeger, 1996
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-198) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Adolf Hitler attained power in 1933 as the result of a complex set of factors, some of which were complementary and some of which were mutually exclusive. This book describes and analyzes the reasons Hitler became chancellor of Germany, which included the harsh Treaty of Versailles that ended World War I; the Germans' lack of faith in democracy and the reasons behind it; the corruption and political and economic mismanagement which characterized the Weimar Republic; the hyperinflation of the early 1920s, when the cost of a dollar exploded to 4.2 trillion marks and the German currency lost 99.3% of its value; the Great Depression, during which nearly a quarter of the German work force was unemployed; the political and economic instability of the times, in which the Nazis thrived; and the evil genius of Hitler, the master politician. This book transports the reader back to the Germany of the 1920s and 1930s, so he or she can experience what it was like to be there as Hitler and his cronies grasped for power and the foundations of the Weimar Republic crumbled.
How did an Austrian tramp named Adolf Hitler become chancellor of Germany, in a position to launch the most infamous reign of terror experienced in the 20th century? Why Hitler? explains the Nazi rise to power in captivating prose and uncompromising detail. Why Hitler^ focuses on the issue of why and how Hitler and his party attained power in Germany, a question asked by all reflective Americans. Author Samuel Mitcham presents new information, dispensing with the hackneyed theory—presented by Hitler in Mein Kampf and repeated by historians as illustrious as William Shirer and Alan Bullock—that the heroic young Fuehrer struggled to survive against poverty and incredible odds, working as a day laborer and living in a flop house, hunger his constant companion. In fact, Hitler's income from his father's pension was higher than that of a junior postal employee, a teacher with less than five years' service, or a court lawyer with one year's salary.
目次
Introduction
The Fall of the Second Reich
The Friekorps and the War After the War
The Treaty of Versailles
Enter Adolf Hitler
Street Violence and Inflation
The Beer Hall Putsch
Political Stability and the Nazi Party's Slow Growth Period, 1924-1929
The Great Depression and Political Chaos
The Suicide of Geli Raubal
Continuous Electioneering and "Cattle Trading"
Hitler Achieves His Goal
Bibliography
Index
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