Heinrich Brüning and the dissolution of the Weimar Republic
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Heinrich Brüning and the dissolution of the Weimar Republic
Cambridge University Press, 1998
Available at 25 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Scholars have long debated whether Heinrich Bruning, head of the German government from 1930 to 1932, was the 'last democratic chancellor'of the Weimar Republic or the trailblazer of the Nazi dictatorship. His memoirs (published in 1970) damaged his reputation badly by terming the restoration of monarchy the 'crux' of his policies. This 1998 book is the first scholarly biography of Bruning in any language and offers a systematic analysis of the economic, social, foreign, and military policies of his cabinet as it sought to cope with the Great Depression. With the help of newly available sources, it clarifies the peculiar distortions in the memoirs, showing that Chancellor Bruning intended to restore parliamentary democracy intact when the economic crisis passed. He was curbing the Nazi menace successfully when President Hindenburg, reactionary landowners, and army generals eager for massive rearmament made the disastrously misguided decision to topple him.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Bruning and the Prussian tradition
- 1. Bruning's political apprenticeship
- 2. The establishment of semi-parlimentary government
- 3. Foreign policy and the 'National Opposition'
- 4. Economics and politics in the shadow of the bank crisis
- 5. Bruning's fall
- 6. The destruction of the rule of law
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index.
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