Nadine Rossol’s research while affiliated with University of Essex and other places

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Publications (2)


The Oxford Handbook of the Weimar Republic
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2020

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1,012 Reads

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6 Citations

Nadine Rossol

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Benjamin Ziemann

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Christopher Dillon

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[...]

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Claudia Siebrecht

The Weimar Republic (1918–33) was a pivotal period of German and European history and a laboratory of modernity. This handbook is a comprehensive reference book presenting the key findings of recent research on Weimar Germany in the most concise and accessible way. Weimar is often presented as a warning from history, and as such invoked time and time again when challenges of democratic governance are debated. But the chapters of the Handbook demonstrate that Weimar’s history is more than just the lead-up to the Third Reich or a crisis-ridden democracy: It was a period of bold experimentation in politics, society, and culture. Written by an international team of leading experts, the Handbook’s thirty-three chapters provide cutting-edge synthesis of all key topics in the history of Germany’s first democracy, covering social, political, economic, and cultural history with a focus on the historical openness of the period. The Handbook also includes a section with chronological chapters on key developments in the political sphere. Each of the chapters can be read on its own. In addition to established topics, the book includes crucial areas of Weimar history that are often forgotten. These cover the relevance of religion, the strength of pro-republican groups, federalism and nationalism, the significance of rural communities and the agricultural sector, as well as the importance of mass and visual cultures for Weimar contemporaries. Navigating Weimar Germany’s complex and contradictory history is made easier by the sound compass this Handbook provides to all readers interested in this turbulent period.

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Citations (1)


... Numerous studies on the economically and politically tumultuous 1930s in Europe establish a connection between the political events that marked that period and economic and employment insecurity (see, for example, Bromhead et al., 2013;Doerr et al., 2021;Weitz 2020). The Great Depression and its dire socio-economic consequences have often been singled out as the main factor fostering the growth of the Nazi party during the Weimar Republic (Siemens 2021). However, even for that specific experience of economic and political crisis, the competing importance of economic and other factors in explaining the rise of specific radical and extreme parties of opposing nature, and the social groups leading to their electoral growth, have been, and still are, disputed aspects of debate (King et al., 2008;Galofré-Vilà et al., 2021). 1 Recent studies on contemporary societies have empirically demonstrated that economic hardship and insecurity influence political orientations, perceptions, and policy preferences in several domains (Margalit 2013(Margalit , 2019Gidron and Hall 2017;Rooduijn and Burgoon 2018;Kaihovaara and Im 2020;Marx 2020;Marx and Picot 2020;Vlandas 2020). ...

Reference:

Job insecurity and vote for radical parties: A four-country study
The Oxford Handbook of the Weimar Republic