1.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Vol. Weimar and now. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
2.
Peukert D, Deveson R. The Weimar Republic: the crisis of classical modernity. 1st pbk. ed. New York: Hill and Wang; 1993.
3.
Kolb E. The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
4.
Evans RJ. The coming of the Third Reich. London: Penguin; 2004.
5.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Vol. Weimar and now. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
6.
Röhl JCG. From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. Vol. Problems and perspectives in history. London: Longmans; 1970.
7.
Stachura PD. The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
8.
Adamthwaite AP. The Lost peace: international relations in Europe, 1918-1939. Vol. Documents of modern history. London: Edward Arnold; 1980.
9.
Burdick CB, Lutz RH. The political institutions of the German revolution, 1918-1919. Vol. Hoover Institution publications. New York: Published for the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., by F.A. Praeger; 1966.
10.
Jürgen Kocka. ** Asymmetrical Historical Comparison: The Case of the German Sonderweg. History and Theory [Internet]. 1999;38(1):40–50. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2505315?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
11.
Peukert D, Deveson R. ** The Weimar Republic: the crisis of classical modernity. 1st pbk. ed. New York: Hill and Wang; 1993.
12.
Mazower M. ** Chapter 1 - The Deserted Temple of Democracy, from: Dark continent: Europe’s twentieth century. In: ** Dark continent: Europe’s twentieth century. London: Penguin; 1999.
13.
Evans RJ. * Chapter 1.1 - German peculiarities, from: The coming of the Third Reich. In: * The coming of the Third Reich. London: Penguin; 2004.
14.
Baranowski S. * East Elbian Landed Elites and Germany’s Turn to Fascism: The Sonderweg Controversy Revis-ited. European history quarterly [Internet]. 1996;26(1):209–40. Available from: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/026569149602600203
15.
Fischer F, Fletcher R. From Kaiserreich to Third Reich: elements of continuity in German history, 1871-1945. London: Allen & Unwin; 1986.
16.
Blackbourn D, Eley G. The Peculiarities of German History: Bourgeois Society and Politics in Nineteenth-Century Germany [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1984. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=684551
17.
Clark CM. * Iron kingdom: the rise and downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947. London: Penguin; 2007.
18.
Gerwarth R. * The vanquished: why the First World War failed to end, 1917-1923. London: Penguin Books; 2017.
19.
Kolb E. The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
20.
Bessel R, MyiLibrary. ** Chapter 1, from: Germany after the First World War. In: ** Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
21.
Verhey R. ** Chapter 11 - War and Revolution. In: Imperial Germany 1871-1918 [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 2008. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829425
22.
a) **The advancement of parliamentarization and democratization by the moderates [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=987
23.
b) **The Split of the Left – the formation of the Independent Social Democrats [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=969
24.
c) **The Formation of the right – the Fatherland Party [Primary Source: Fatherland Party] [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=971
25.
Kolb E. ** Introduction. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
26.
**The realization that the war is lost [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=989
27.
Bessel R, MyiLibrary. ** Chapter 8 - The post-war transition and the moral order, from: Germany after the First World War. In: ** Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
28.
Verhey R. ** Chapter 11 - War and Revolution. In: Imperial Germany 1871-1918 [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 2008. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829425
29.
Bessel R, MyiLibrary. ** Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
30.
Kolb E. ** Chapter 1.1 - Revolution. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
31.
Mann H. ** The Meaning and Idea of the Revolution (1918), Speech to the Council of Intel-lectual Workers, Doc. 14. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
32.
von Westarp K. ** On the End of the Monarchy in 1918, Memoirs, Doc. IV/2. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
33.
Groener W. ** On the Alliance with Ebert in 1918, Memoirs, , Doc. IV/3. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
34.
v. Hindenburg P. ** On the Terms of the Alliance in 1918, Letter to Ebert, 1918, Doc IV/4. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
35.
Ebert F. ** On the Survival of the Bureaucracy in 1918, Speech to the Prime Ministers of the German States on the 25.11.1918, Doc. IV/5. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
36.
Spartacus Group. ** Spartacus Manifesto (1918), Doc. 13. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
37.
Kessler GH. ** On Ebert and the Revolution (1919), Diary, Doc. 17. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
38.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** The Constitution of the German Republic (1919), Key Paragraphs, Doc. 16. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
39.
Röhl JCG. ** From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. Vol. Problems and perspectives in history. London: Longmans; 1970.
40.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Vol. Weimar and now. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
41.
Kolb E. ** Section A.1: The Revolution and the Foundation of the Republic, from: The Weimar Republic. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
42.
Mann H. ** The Meaning and Idea of the Revolution (1918), Speech to the Council of Intellectual Workers, Doc.14. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
43.
Burdick CB, Lutz RH. ** The First Congress of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Councils (1918), Transcript of the Debate. In: The political institutions of the German revolution, 1918-1919. New York: Published for the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., by F.A. Praeger; 1966. p. 211–27.
44.
Burdick CB, Lutz RH. ** The First Congress of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Councils (1918), Transcript of the Debate. In: The political institutions of the German revolution, 1918-1919. New York: Published for the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., by F.A. Praeger; 1966. p. 211–7.
45.
Spartacus Group. ** Spartacus Manifesto (1918), Doc. 13. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
46.
Luxemburg R. ** The Founding Manifesto of the Communist Party, , Doc. 15. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
47.
Ebert F. ** On the Survival of the Bureaucracy in 1918, Speech to the Prime Ministers of the German States on the 25.11. 1918, Doc. IV/5. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
48.
v. Hindenburg P. ** On the Terms of the Alliance in 1918, Letter to Ebert, 1918, Doc IpublisV/4. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
49.
Groener W. ** On the Alliance with Ebert in 1918, Memoirs, Doc. IV/3. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
50.
Mann H. ** The Meaning and Idea of the Revolution (1918), Speech to the Council of Intellectual Workers, Doc.14. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
51.
Spartacus Group. ** Spartacus Manifesto (1918), Doc. 13. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
52.
Luxemburg R. ** The Founding Manifesto of the Communist Party, Doc. 15. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
53.
Burdick CB, Lutz RH. ** The First Congress of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Councils (1918), Transcript of the Debate, from:  The political institutions of the German revolution, 1918-1919. In: The political institutions of the German revolution, 1918-1919. New York: Published for the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., by F.A. Praeger; 1966. p. 211–27.
54.
Ebert F. ** On the Survival of the Bureaucracy in 1918, Speech to the Prime Ministers of the German States on the 25.11. 1918, Doc. IV/5. In: From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
55.
Kolb E. ** Part 1/A: Origin and Consolidation of the Republic, from: The Weimar Republic. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005. p. 1–34.
56.
Kolb E. ** Part 2/2: The Revolutionary Origins. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005. p. 138–48.
57.
Vincent CP, Ritter H. A historical dictionary of Germany’s Weimar Republic, 1918-1933 [Internet]. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press; 1997. Available from: http://librarysearch.le.ac.uk/openurl/44UOLE/44UOLE_VU1?u.ignore_date_coverage=true&rft.mms_id=991009337498602746
58.
Lowenthal R. * The ‘Missing Revolution’ in Industrial Societies: Comparative Reflections on a German Problem. In: Germany in the age of total war. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 240–57.
59.
Beryl Williams. * Review: The End of a European Dream? Recent Writings on Revolution in Europe: Reinterpreting Revolution in Twentieth-Century Europe by Moira Donald; Tim Rees. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 2002;37(3):457–65. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3180791?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
60.
Carsten FL. * Revolution in central Europe 1918-1919. London: Wildwood House; 1988.
61.
Mommsen H. * The rise and fall of Weimar democracy. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press; 1996.
62.
Rürup R. * The problem of revolution in Germany 1789-1989. Vol. German historical perspectives. Oxford: Berg; 2000.
63.
Salomon E von. ** The Outlawed. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
64.
Bessel R, MyiLibrary. ** Chapter 10, from: Germany after the First World War. In: ** Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
65.
Gumbel. ** Four Years of Political Murder. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
66.
** Proclamation of the ‘Reich chancellor’ during the Kapp putsch (1920) [Internet]. Available from: http://alphahistory.com/weimarrepublic/proclamation-kapp-putsch-1920/
67.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** German Workers’ Party (DAP), The Twenty-Five Points (1920), Doc. 47. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
68.
Kershaw I. * The Drummer. In: Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
69.
Robert Gerwarth. ** The Central European Counter-Revolution: Paramilitary Violence in Germany, Austria and Hungary after the Great War. Past & Present [Internet]. 2008;(200):175–209. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25096723?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
70.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** German Workers’ Party (DAP), The Twenty-Five Points (1920), Doc. 47. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
71.
Gumbel. ** Four Years of Political Murder. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
72.
** Proclamation of the ‘Reich chancellor’ during the Kapp putsch (1920) [Internet]. Available from: http://alphahistory.com/weimarrepublic/proclamation-kapp-putsch-1920/
73.
Salomon E von. ** The Outlawed. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
74.
Bessel R, MyiLibrary. ** Chapter 9, from: Germany after the First World War. In: ** Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
75.
Robert Gerwarth. ** The Central European Counter-Revolution: Paramilitary Violence in Germany, Austria and Hungary after the Great War. Past & Present [Internet]. 2008;(200):175–209. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25096723?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
76.
Kershaw I. ** The Drummer. In: Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
77.
Bessel R, MyiLibrary. * Chapter 9 - The Legacy of the *First World War and Weimar Politics, from: Germany after the First World War. In: ** Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. p. 254–84. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
78.
Kolb E. The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
79.
Diehl JM. * Paramilitary politics in Weimar Germany. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 1977.
80.
Gatens RM. * Prelude to Gleichschaltung: The University of Heidelberg and the E.J. Gumbel Controversies, 1924 and 1932. European History Quarterly. 2001 Jan;31(1):65–99.
81.
Theweleit K. * Male fantasies: 1: Women, floods, bodies, history. Cambridge: Polity Press; 1987.
82.
Theweleit K. * Male fantasies: psychoanalyzing the white terror, Vol. 2: Male bodies. Cambridge: Polity; 1988.
83.
Ziemann B. War Experiences in Rural Germany: 1914-1923 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=487187
84.
Kolb E. ** Chapter A.1. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
85.
Schoenberger C. ** Hugo Preuß: An Introduction, from: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar: a jurisprudence of crisis [Internet]. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224557
86.
Jacobson AJ, Schlink B. ** Hugo Preuß: The Significance of the Republic for the Idea of Social Justice, from: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar: a jurisprudence of crisis [Internet]. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224557
87.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Doc 16, The Constitution of the German Republic. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
88.
Schoenberger C. ** Carl Schmitt: introduction, from: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar: a jurisprudence of crisis [Internet]. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224557
89.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc. 38 - German Center Party, Program (1922). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
90.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Doc. 42 - Social Democratic Party (SPD), Program (1925), from:  The Weimar Republic sourcebook. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
91.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Doc. 43 - German People’s Party (DVP), Program (1931). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
92.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** German National People’s Party (DNVP),  Program (1931),  Doc. 348. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
93.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Communist Party (KPD), Founding Manifesto, Doc. 15. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
94.
Schoenberger C. ** Hugo Preuß: The Significance of the Republic for the Idea of Social Justice, from: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar: a jurisprudence of crisis [Internet]. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224557
95.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. The Constitution of the German Republic, Doc. 16. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
96.
Kolb E. ** Part 1/B/2 Structural Problems. In: The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge; 1988.
97.
Kolb E. ** Part 2/3: The Reich Constitution, the Party System, and the Reichswehr. In: The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge; 1988.
98.
Schoenberger C. ** Hugo Preuß: An Introduction, from: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar: a jurisprudence of crisis [Internet]. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224557
99.
Neumann V. ** Carl Schmitt: introduction. In: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis [Internet]. University of California Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=224557
100.
Mommsen H. * Chapter 3- Founding a Democracy. In: The rise and fall of Weimar democracy. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press; 1996.
101.
Stirk, P. * Hugo Preuss, German political thought and the Weimar constitution. Stirk, P [Internet]. 23(3):497–516. Available from: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/imp/hpt/2002/00000023/00000003/323
102.
Finn JE. * Constitutional Dissolution in the Weimar Republic. In: Constitutions in Crisis: Political Violence and the Rule of Law [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1990. p. 139–78. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=271241
103.
Schlink B, Jacobson AJ. * Introduction: Constitutional Crisis: The German and the American Experience: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis [Internet]. University of California Press; 2002. p. 1–40. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=224557
104.
Isenberg NW, MyiLibrary. ** Weimar cinema: an essential guide to classic films of the era [Internet]. Vol. Film and culture series. New York: Columbia University Press; 2009. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=909254
105.
Kracauer S, Quaresima L. ** From Caligari to Hitler : a psychological history of the German film. Rev. and expanded ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2004.
106.
Kaes A. ** Shell shock cinema: Weimar culture and the wounds of war. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2009.
107.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Treaty of Versailles (1919), Doc. 2 . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
108.
Brockdorff-Rantzau. ** Speech of the German Delegation, Versailles (1919), Doc. 3. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
109.
Troeltsch E. ** The Dogma of Guilt (1919), Doc. 4. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
110.
Kroner F. ** Overwrought Nerves (1923), Doc. 22. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
111.
Keynes JM. The economic consequences of the peace. London: Macmillan; 1919.
112.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** The Treaty of Versailles (1919),Doc. 2. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
113.
Boemeke MF, Gläser E, Feldman GD, German Historical Institute (Washington, D.C.). ** Introduction. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 1–21.
114.
Henig R. Versailles and After, 1919-1933 [Internet]. 2nd ed. Florence: Taylor & Francis Group; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=178306
115.
Kolb E. ** Chapter I.A.2. The Paris Peace Conference, from:  The Weimar Republic. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005. p. 3–23.
116.
Kolb E. ** Chapter I.B.1. German Foreign Policy within the European System. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005. p. 51–66.
117.
Kolb E. ** Chapter II.5. From the Peace Treaty to the Young Plan. In: The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005. p. 166–79.
118.
Cohrs PO. The unfinished peace after World War I: America, Britain and the stabilisation of Europe, 1919-1932 [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2006. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474210650005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
119.
Michael L. Dockrill  and John, Dr Fisher. * Paris Peace Conference, 1919 : Peace without Victory? [Internet]. Palgrave Macmillan; 2001. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=496109
120.
Goldstein E. The First World War Peace Settlements, 1919-1925 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1474411
121.
Kitchen M. * Europe between the wars: a political history. Vol. Silver library. Harlow: Longman; 1988.
122.
Manela E. * ’ ’Dawn of a new era? The ‘Wilsonian Moment’ in Colonial Contexts and the Transformation of World Order, 1917-1923. In: Competing visions of world order: global moments and movements, 1880s-1930s [Internet]. New York: Palgrave; 2007. p. 121–50. Available from: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230604285
123.
Overy RJ. * The inter-war crisis, 1919 - 1939. Vol. Seminar studies in history. London: Longman; 1994.
124.
Conrad S, Sachsenmaier D, Palgrave Connect (Online Service). * Competing visions of world order: global moments and movements, 1880s-1930s [Internet]. Vol. Palgrave Macmillan transnational history series. New York: Palgrave; 2007. Available from: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230604285
125.
Feldman GD. The Great Disorder: Politics, Economics, and Society in the German Inflation, 1914-1924 [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1997. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=728864
126.
Ferguson N. * The Balance of Payments Question: Versailles and After. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 401–41.
127.
Schwavbe K. * ’Germany’s Peace Aims and the Domestic and International Constraints. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 37–69.
128.
Jonathan Wright. ** Gustav Stresemann : Weimar’s Greatest Statesman [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829410
129.
Jonathan Wright. Chapter 6. In: Gustav Stresemann : Weimar’s Greatest Statesman [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829410
130.
** Reichstag’s Hearing on the Occupation of the Ruhr [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=4341
131.
** Betty Scholem on the Inflation [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=3842
132.
** Friedrich Kroner, Overwrought Nerves [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=3841
133.
Jonathan Wright. ** Chapter 7. In: Gustav Stresemann : Weimar’s Greatest Statesman [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829410
134.
The Dawes Committee Report [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=4417
135.
Jonathan Wright. ** Gustav Stresemann : Weimar’s Greatest Statesman [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829410
136.
Zweig S. ** Doc. 151 - The Monotonization of the World. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
137.
Bauer O. ** Doc. 157 - The Rationalization and the Social Order. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
138.
Zweig S. ** Doc. 232 - Charleston: Every Age has the Dance it deserves. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
139.
Gerstel A. ** Doc. 228 - Jazz Band. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
140.
Zweig S. ** Doc. 151 - The Monotonization of the World. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
141.
Kracaeur S. ** Doc. 83 - Working Women. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
142.
Taut B. ** Doc. 177 - The Woman as Creator. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
143.
Mary Nolan. ** Introduction. In: Visions of Modernity : American Business and the Modernization of Germany [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1994. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=241630
144.
Peukert D, Deveson R. ** The Weimar Republic: the crisis of classical modernity. 1st pbk. ed. New York: Hill and Wang; 1993.
145.
Kolb E. ** Chapter 3 _ The artistic avant-garde and mass culture in the golden twenties. In: The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge; 1988.
146.
Weber M. ** Doc. 72 - The Special Cultural Mission of Women . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
147.
Bessel R. Chapter 1 - Germany during World War One, from:  Germany after the First World War. In: Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
148.
Frevert U. ** Women in German history: from bourgeois emancipation to sexual liberation. Oxford: Berg; 1989.
149.
Boak H. ** Women in Weimar Politics. European history quarterly [Internet]. 20(3):369–99. Available from: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/026569149002000303
150.
Scheck R. ** Introduction. In: Mothers of the nation: right-wing women in Weimar Germany. Oxford: Berg; 2004.
151.
Herrmann E. ** Doc. 78 - This is the New Woman . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
152.
Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung. ** Doc. 281 - Enough is Enough! Against the Masculinization of Women (1925). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
153.
Kracauer S. ** Doc. 83 - Working Women. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
154.
Frevert U. ** Women in German history: from bourgeois emancipation to sexual liberation. Oxford: Berg; 1989.
155.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Doc. 82 - The Kienle Case, Die Weltbühne (14.4.1931). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
156.
Atina Grossmann. ** Reforming Sex : The German Movement for Birth Control and Abortion Reform, 1920-1950 [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=241568
157.
Weber M. ** Doc. 72 - The Special Cultural Mission of Women (1919). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
158.
Herrmann E. ** Doc. 78 - This is the New Woman (1929). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
159.
Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung. ** Doc. 281 - ‘Enough is Enough! Against the Masculinization of Women’ (1925). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
160.
Kracauer S. ** Doc. 83 - Working Women. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
161.
Frevert U. ** Women in German history: from bourgeois emancipation to sexual liberation. Oxford: Berg; 1989.
162.
Boak H. ** Women in Weimar Politics. European history quarterly [Internet]. 20(3):369–99. Available from: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/026569149002000303
163.
Raffael Scheck. ** Women on the Weimar Right: The Role of Female Politicians in the Deutschnationale Volkspartei (DNVP). Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 2001;36(4):547–60. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3180772
164.
Atina Grossmann. ** Reforming Sex : The German Movement for Birth Control and Abortion Reform, 1920-1950 [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=241568
165.
Harvey E. ** Serving the Volk, Serving the Nation: Women in the Youth Movement and the Public Sphere in Weimar Germany. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 201–22.
166.
Braker R. * Helene Stocker’s Pacifism in the Weimar Republic: Between Ideal and Reality. Journal of Women’s History. 2001;13(3):70–97.
167.
Renate Bridenthal. * Beyond Kinder, Küche, Kirche: Weimar Women at Work. Central European History [Internet]. 1973;6(2):148–66. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4545664
168.
Christiane Eifert and Pamela E. Selwyn. * Coming to Terms with the State: Maternalist Politics and the Development of the Welfare State in Weimar Germany. Central European History [Internet]. 1997;30(1):25–47. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546666
169.
Geoff Eley and Atina Grossmann. * Maternalism and Citizenship in Weimar Germany: The Gendered Politics of Welfare. Central European History [Internet]. 1997;30(1):67–75. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546668?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
170.
Evans RJ. * The feminist movement in Germany, 1894-1933. Vol. Sage studies in 20th century history. London: Sage Publications; 1976.
171.
Fairchild ES. * Women Police in Weimar: Professionalism, Politics, and Innovation in Police Organizations. Law & Society Review. 1987;21(3).
172.
Rüdiger Graf. * Anticipating the Future in the Present: ‘New Women’ and Other Beings of the Future in Weimar Germany. Central European History [Internet]. 2009;42(4):647–73. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40600975
173.
Young-Sun Hong. * Gender, Citizenship, and the Welfare State: Social Work and the Politics of Femininity in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 1997;30(1):1–24. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546665?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
174.
Brian Peterson. * The Politics of Working-Class Women in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 1977;10(2):87–111. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4545793?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
175.
Scheck R. * Mothers of the nation: right-wing women in Weimar Germany. Oxford: Berg; 2004.
176.
Usborne C. Cultures of abortion in Weimar Germany. Vol. Monographs in German history. Oxford: Berghahn; 2011.
177.
Jason Crouthamel. ** Male Sexuality and Psychological Trauma: Soldiers and Sexual Disorder in World War I and Weimar Germany. Journal of the History of Sexuality [Internet]. 2008;17(1):60–84. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30114369
178.
Diem C. ** Doc. 303 - The German Academy for Gymnastics. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
179.
Koch A. ** Doc. 292 - The Truth about the Berlin Nudist Groups. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
180.
Raymond C. Sun. ** ‘Hammer Blows’: Work, the Workplace, and the Culture of Masculinity among Catholic Workers in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 2004;37(2):245–71. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4547408
181.
Wildung F. ** Sport is the Will to culture (1926). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
182.
Preiss E. ** Doc. 297 - Physical fitness – a national necessity. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
183.
Bathrick D. ** Max Schmeling on the Canvas: Boxing as an Icon of Weimar Culture. New German Critique. 1990 Autumn;(51).
184.
Diem C. ** Doc. 303 - The German Academy for Gymnastics. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
185.
Koch A. ** Doc. 292 - The Truth about the Berlin Nudist Groups. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
186.
Wildung F. ** Sport is the Will to culture (1926). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
187.
Preiss E. ** Doc. 297 - Physical fitness – a national necessity. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
188.
Jason Crouthamel. ** Male Sexuality and Psychological Trauma: Soldiers and Sexual Disorder in World War I and Weimar Germany. Journal of the History of Sexuality [Internet]. 2008;17(1):60–84. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30114369
189.
Raymond C. Sun. ** ‘Hammer Blows’: Work, the Workplace, and the Culture of Masculinity among Catholic Workers in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 2004;37(2):245–71. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4547408
190.
Bathrick D. ** Max Schmeling on the Canvas: Boxing as an Icon of Weimar Culture. New German Critique. 1990 Autumn;(51).
191.
Jason Crouthamel. * War Neurosis versus Savings Psychosis: Working-Class Politics and Psychological Trauma in Weimar Germany. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 2002;37(2):163–82. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3180680?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
192.
Michael Hau. * Sports in the Human Economy: ‘Leibesübungen,’ Medicine, Psychology, and Performance Enhancement during the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 2008;41(3):381–412. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20457367
193.
Julia Roos. * Women’s Rights, Nationalist Anxiety, and the ‘Moral’ Agenda in the Early Weimar Republic: Revisiting the ‘Black Horror’ Campaign against France’s African Occupation Troops. Central European History [Internet]. 2009;42(3):473–508. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40600786
194.
* Special Issue of Journal of Sport History: One Hundred Years of "Muscular Ju-daism”: Sport in Jewish History and Culture (1999). Available from: http://library.la84.org/SportsLibrary/JSH/JSH1999/JSH2602/jsh2602a.pdf
195.
Theweleit K. * Male fantasies: 1: Women, floods, bodies, history. Cambridge: Polity Press; 1987.
196.
Theweleit K. * Male fantasies: psychoanalyzing the white terror, Vol. 2: Male bodies. Cambridge: Polity; 1988.
197.
Haas W. ** Doc. 263 - Metropolis. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
198.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Doc. 269 - Fritz Lang’s M: Filmed Sadism (1931) . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
199.
Kuhle Wampe oder: Wem gehört die Welt? - YouTube [Internet]. Available from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8Kc2ez_5e4
200.
Hall SF. ** Youth protection and the prevention of juvenile delinquency. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):353–70.
201.
Ross C. ** Chapter 1 - Introduction. In: Media and the making of modern Germany: mass communications, society, and politics from the Empire to the Third Reich. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2008.
202.
Hall SF. ** Youth protection and the prevention of juvenile delinquency. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):353–70.
203.
Führer KC, Ross C. * Mass media, culture, and society in twentieth-century Germany. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2006.
204.
Fulda B. Press and politics in the Weimar Republic [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2009. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=728874
205.
Kolb E. * Chapter I/3 - The Artistic Avantgarde and Mass Culture in the Golden Twenties . In: The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge; 1988. p. 83–96.
206.
Gay P. * Weimar culture: the outsider as insider. New York: W.W. Norton; 2001.
207.
Murray BA. * Film and the German Left in the Weimar Republic: from Caligari to Kuhle Wampe. Austin: University of Texas Press; 1990.
208.
Plummer TG. * Film and politics in the Weimar republic. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota; 1982.
209.
Siemens D. * Explaining crime Berlin newspapers and the construction of the criminal in Weimar Germany. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):336–52.
210.
Moritz Föllmer. * Suicide and Crisis in Weimar Berlin. Central European History [Internet]. 2009;42(2):195–221. Available from: https://www.jstor.org/stable/40600593?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
211.
Tatar M. * Lustmord: sexual murder in Weimar Germany. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press; 1995.
212.
Kracauer S. ** Doc. 267 - The Blue Angel (1930). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
213.
Feldmeister D. ** Doc. 3 - A Definition of the German Boy Scout Philosophy. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
214.
Fuhrer D. ** Doc. 5 - A Description of the Aims of ‘Adler und Falken’. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
215.
Quickborn. ** Doc. 6 - A Self-Description of the Quickborn-Group. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
216.
Falken SD. ** Doc. 10 - Declaration of the Sozialistische Arbeiterjugend after the murder of Wal-ther Rathenau. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
217.
Harvey E. ** Youth Unemployment. In: Youth and the welfare state in the Weimar Republic. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993. p. 103–51.
218.
Stachura PD. The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
219.
Feldmeister D. ** Doc. 3 - A Definition of the German Boy Scout Philosophy. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
220.
Fuhrer D. ** Doc. 5 -A Description of the Aims of ‘Adler und Falken’. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
221.
Quickborn. ** Doc. 6 - A Self-Description of the Quickborn-Group. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
222.
Falken SD. ** Doc. 10 - Declaration of the Sozialistische Arbeiterjugend after the murder of Wal-ther Rathenau. In: The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
223.
Peukert D, Deveson R. ** The Weimar Republic: the crisis of classical modernity. 1st pbk. ed. New York: Hill and Wang; 1993.
224.
Katherine Larson Roper. ** Images of German Youth in Weimar Novels. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1978;13(3):499–516. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260206
225.
Stachura PD. The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
226.
Harvey E. Youth and the welfare state in the Weimar Republic. Vol. Oxford historical monographs. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993.
227.
Jones LE, Retallack JN, German History Society (Great Britain). * Generational Conflict and the Problem of Political Mobilization in the Weimar Republic. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 347–71.
228.
Harvey E. * Serving the Volk, Serving the Nation: Women in the Youth Movement . In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 21–2.
229.
Koch HW. * The Hitler youth: origins and development, 1922-45. London: Macdonald and Jane’s; 1975.
230.
Roseman M. * Generations in conflict: youth revolt and generation formation in Germany, 1770-1968. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995.
231.
Stachura PD. * Nazi youth in the Weimar Republic. Vol. Studies in comparative politics. Santa Barbara, Calif: Clio Books; 1975.
232.
Stachura PD. * The Weimar Republic and the younger proletariat: an economic and social analysis. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1989.
233.
Wolfgang Zorn. * Student Politics in the Weimar Republic. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1970;5(1):128–43. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/259985?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
234.
Gropius W. ** Doc. 167 - Program of the Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar (1919). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
235.
Meyer H. ** Doc. 170 - The New World (1926). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
236.
Gropius W. ** Doc. 167 -Program of the Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
237.
Meyer H. ** Doc. 170 - The New World (1926). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
238.
Gropius W, Schultze Naumburg P. ** Who is Right? Traditional Architecture of Bulding in New Forms? . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
239.
Franciscono M. ** Walter Gropius and the creation of the Bauhaus in Weimar: the ideals and artistic theories of its founding years. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 1971.
240.
Scheidig W, Beyer KG. ** Crafts of the Weimar Bauhaus, 1919-1924: an early experiment in industrial design. London: Studio Vista; 1967.
241.
Wingler HM, Stein J. ** The Bauhaus: Weimar, Dessau, Berlin, Chicago. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press; 1969.
242.
van den Bruck AM. ** Doc. 128 - The Third Reich (1923). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
243.
Schmitt C. ** Doc. 133 - The concept of the political. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
244.
Freyer H. ** Doc. 135 - Revolution from the Right. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
245.
Jeffrey Herf. ** The Engineer as Ideologue: Reactionary Modernists in Weimar and Nazi Germany. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1984;19(4):631–48. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260329
246.
Woods R. ** The conservative revolution in the Weimar Republic. Basingstoke: MacMillan; 1996.
247.
Jones LE, Retallack JN. * Between reform, reaction, and resistance: studies in the history of German conservatism from 1789 to 1945. Providence: Berg; 1993.
248.
Blinkhorn M. Fascists and conservatives: the radical right and the establishment in twentieth-century Europe [Internet]. London: Unwin Hyman; 1990. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=179005
249.
Phelan A. * The Weimar dilemma: intellectuals in the Weimar Republic. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1985.
250.
Finck L. ** Doc. 158 - The Ghost of Berlin . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
251.
Tucholsky K. ** Doc. 160 - Berlin and the Provinces . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
252.
Heidegger. ** Doc. 165 - Provinces. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
253.
Goll I. ** Doc. 233 - The Negroes are conquering Europe. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
254.
Goebbels J. ** Doc. 234 - Around the Gedächtniskirche. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
255.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Chapter 26 - Visual Culture: Illustrated Press and Photography. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
256.
Von der Goltz A. ** Hindenburg: power, myth, and the rise of the Nazis [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2009. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9780191571398
257.
Jones LE. ** Hitler versus Hindenburg: the 1932 presidential elections and the end of the Weimar Republic [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2015. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4185040
258.
Wheeler-Bennett JW. * Hindenburg: the wooden titan. London: Macmillan; 1936.
259.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
260.
JONES LE. ** German Conservatism at the Crossroads: Count Kuno von Westarp and the Struggle for Control of the DNVP, 1928–30. Contemporary European History. 2009 May;18(02).
261.
Jones LE. ** Nationalists, Nazis, and the Assault against Weimar: Revisiting the Harzburg Rally of October 1931. German Studies Review [Internet]. 2006;29(3):483–94. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/27668122.pdf
262.
Larry Eugene Jones. ** ‘The Greatest Stupidity of My Life’: Alfred Hugenberg and the Formation of the Hitler Cabinet, January 1933. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1992;27(1):63–87. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260779
263.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc:  47: NSDAP, 25 Points. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
264.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc:  136: DNVP, Party Programme. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
265.
Papen F von. ** Chapter 6. In: Memoirs. London: Andre Deutsch; 1952.
266.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. Doc. 137: Edgar Jung: Conservative Revolution. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
267.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. ** Doc. 146: Papen German Cultural Policy. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
268.
Baranowski S. ** The East Elbian Elites and Germany’s Turn towards Fascism. European history quarterly. 1996;26(1):209–40.
269.
Conze. ** Only a dictator can help us now. In: European aristocracies and the radical right 1918-1939. New York: Oxford University Press [for the] German Historical Institute; 2007. p. 129–48.
270.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
271.
Frieda Wunderlich. ** The German Unemployment Insurance Act of 1927. The Quarterly Journal of Economics [Internet]. 1928;42(2):278–306. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1884049?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
272.
Hong YS. ** Welfare, modernity, and the Weimar State, 1919-1933 [Internet]. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 2014. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1700104
273.
Crew D. ** The Ambiguities of Modernity: Welfare and the German State from Wilhelm to Hitler. In: Society, culture, and the state in Germany, 1870-1930. Ann Arbor, Mich: University of Michigan Press; 1996.
274.
Harvey E. ** Youth and the welfare state in the Weimar Republic. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993.
275.
Hong YS. ** World War I and the German Welfare State: Gender, Religion and the Paradoxes of Modernity. In: Society, culture, and the state in Germany, 1870-1930. Ann Arbor, Mich: University of Michigan Press; 1996.
276.
Crew DF. * Germans on welfare: from Weimar to Hitler. New York: Oxford University Press; 1998.
277.
Bry G, National Bureau of Economic Research. * Wages in Germany, 1871-1945. Vol. no. 68. Princeton [N.J.]: Princeton University Press; 1960.
278.
Evans RJ, Geary D, University of East Anglia. Research Seminar Group on German Social History. * The German unemployed: experiences and consequences of mass unemployment from the Weimar Republic to the Third Reich. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1987.
279.
Feldman GD. * Army, industry and labor in Germany 1914-1918. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1966.
280.
Mommsen WJ, Mock W, German Historical Institute in London. * The emergence of the welfare state in Britain and Germany, 1850-1950. London: Croom Helm on behalf of the German Historical Institute; 1981.
281.
Stachura PD. * Unemployment and the great depression in Weimar Germany. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1986.
282.
Steinmetz G. Regulating the Social: The Welfare State and Local Politics in Imperial Germany [Internet]. 1st ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=617266
283.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** Chapter I/C Disintegration and Destruction of the Republic, from: The Weimar Republic. In: ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. p. 96–126. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
284.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** Chapter II/6: The Last Phase of the Republic, from: The Weimar Republic. In: ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. p. 179–94. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
285.
Bracher KD. ** Democracy and the Power Vacuum: The Problem of the Party State During the Disintegration of the Weimar Republic. In: Germany in the age of total war. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 189–202.
286.
Falter J. * Unemployment and the Radicalization of the German Electorate 1928-1933. In: Unemployment and the great depression in Weimar Germany. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1986. p. 187–208.
287.
Balderston T. * The origins and course of the German economic crisis: November 1923 to May 1932. Vol. Bd. 2. Berlin: Haude & Spener; 1993.
288.
James H. * The German slump: politics and economics, 1924-1936. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1986.
289.
Holtfereich CL. * Economic Policy Options at the End of the Weimar Republic. In: Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990. p. 58–91.
290.
Kindleberger CP. * The world in depression, 1929-1939. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1987.
291.
Holtfereich CL. ** Economic Policy Options at the End of the Weimar Republic. In: Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990. p. 58–91.
292.
Borchardt K. ** Constraints and Room for Manoeuvre in the Great Depression of the Early Thirties: Towards a Revision of the Received Historical Picture. In: Perspectives on modern German economic history and policy [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511622304
293.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. Chapter I/C Disintegration and Destruction of the Republic, from: The Weimar Republic. In: ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. p. 96–126. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
294.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** Chapter II/6: The Last Phase of the Republic, from: The Weimar Republic. In: ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. p. 179–94. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
295.
Mommsen H. * The rise and fall of Weimar democracy. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press; 1996.
296.
Kindleberger CP. * The world in depression, 1929-1939. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1987.
297.
Patch WL. * Heinrich Brüning and the dissolution of the Weimar Republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998.
298.
Childers T. ** The Nazi voter: the social foundations of fascism in Germany, 1919-1933. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1983.
299.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc:  52: NSDAP. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
300.
O’Loughlin J. ** The Geography of the Nazi Vote: Context, Confession, and Class in the Reichstag Election of 1930. Annals of the Association of American Geographers [Internet]. 1994;84(3):351–80. Available from: https://ssrc.indiana.edu/doc/wimdocs/2011-02-18_oloughlin_etal.pdf
301.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
302.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc:  53. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
303.
Baranowski S. ** Chapter 6 - Fluid Boundaries. In: The Sanctity of Rural Life: Nobility, Protestantism, and Nazism in Weimar Prussia [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=273193
304.
O’Loughlin J. ** The Geography of the Nazi Vote: Context, Confession, and Class in the Reichstag Election of 1930. Annals of the Association of American Geographers [Internet]. 1994;84(3):351–80. Available from: https://ssrc.indiana.edu/doc/wimdocs/2011-02-18_oloughlin_etal.pdf
305.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc: 71. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
306.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc. 84. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
307.
** Horst Wessel Song [Internet]. Available from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst-Wessel-Lied
308.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc: 61, The Berlin Strike. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
309.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Section 5: The Rise of Nazism. In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
310.
Hitler Adolf. Mein Kampf. Mahaveer Publishers; 2013.
311.
Goebbels J, Lochner LP. ** The Goebbels diaries. London: H. Hamilton; 1948.
312.
O’Loughlin J. ** The Geography of the Nazi Vote: Context, Confession, and Class in the Reichstag Election of 1930. Annals of the Association of American Geographers [Internet]. 1994;84(3):351–80. Available from: https://ssrc.indiana.edu/doc/wimdocs/2011-02-18_oloughlin_etal.pdf
313.
Falter J. ** The Social Bases of Political Cleavages in the Weimar Republic. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 371–99.
314.
Falter J. ** Unemployment and the Radicalization of the German Electorate. In: Unemployment and the great depression in Weimar Germany. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1986. p. 187–208.
315.
Childers T. ** The Nazi voter: the social foundations of fascism in Germany, 1919-1933. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1983.
316.
Baranowski S. ** Chapter 6 - Fluid Boundaries. In: The Sanctity of Rural Life: Nobility, Protestantism, and Nazism in Weimar Prussia [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=273193
317.
Mason TW, Caplan J. Nazism, fascism and the working class [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511622328
318.
Childers T. * The formation of the Nazi constituency, 1919-1933. Totowa, N.J.: Barnes & Noble; 1986.
319.
Corni G. * Hitler and the peasants: agrarian policy of the Third Reich, 1930-1939. New York: Berg; 1990.
320.
Geary D. * The Industrial Elites and the Nazis. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 85–100.
321.
Geary D. * Hitler and Nazism. 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 2000.
322.
Hamilton RF. * Who voted for Hitler? Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1982.
323.
Kershaw I. * Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
324.
Broszat M. Hitler and the collapse of Weimar Germany. Oxford: Berg; 1987.
325.
Kershaw I. Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
326.
Burrin P. Hitler and the Jews: the genesis of the Holocaust. London: Edward Arnold; 1994.
327.
De Grand AJ. Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany: the ‘fascist’ style of rule. London: Routledge; 1995.
328.
Geary D. Hitler and Nazism. 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 2000.
329.
Geary D. The Industrial Elites and the Nazis. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 85–100.
330.
Hamann B. Hitler’s Vienna: a dictator’s apprenticeship. London: Tauris Parke Paperbacks; 2010.
331.
Hamilton RF. Who voted for Hitler? Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1982.
332.
Orlow D. The history of the Nazi Party. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press; 1969.
333.
Payne SG. A history of fascism, 1914-1945. London: Routledge; 2005.
334.
Noakes J, Pridham G. Chapter 4: The Struggle for Power. In: Nazism 1919-1945: a documentary reader Vol 1. Exeter: University of Exeter; 1983.
335.
Kershaw I. Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990.
336.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. Chapter I/C Disintegration and Destruction of the Republic. In: The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. p. 96–126. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
337.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. Chapter II/6: The Last Phase of the Republic. In: The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. p. 179–94. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
338.
Peukert D, Deveson R. The Weimar Republic: the crisis of classical modernity. London: Penguin; 1993.
339.
Geary D. * The Industrial Elites and the Nazis. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 85–100.
340.
Geary D. The Industrial Elites and the Nazis. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 85–100.
341.
Geyer M. Etudes in Political History: Reichswehr, Nsdap, and the Seizure of Power. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 101–23.
342.
Kershaw I. Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
343.
Papen F von. ** Chapter 6. In: Memoirs. London: Andre Deutsch; 1952.
344.
Eberhard Kolb , and  Eberhard Kolb. ** Chapter 3, from: The Weimar Republic. In: ** The Weimar Republic [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=214455
345.
Hitler Adolf. Mein Kampf. Mahaveer Publishers; 2013.
346.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc: 52: Address to the Industry Club (1932). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
347.
Goebbels J, Lochner LP. ** The Goebbels diaries. London: H. Hamilton; 1948.
348.
Goebbels J. **Doc 52: Why Are We Enemies of the Jews?, . In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
349.
Goebbels J. **Doc 53: Fighting League for German Culture (1932). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
350.
Rosenberg A. **Doc 45: The Russian Jewish Revolution (1919). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
351.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. **Doc 47: German Workers’ Party (DAP), The Twenty-Five Points (1920). In: The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
352.
Burleigh M. ** The Third Reich: a new history. London: Pan; 2001.
353.
Fulbrook M, Breuilly J. ** German history since 1800. London: Bloomsbury Academic; 2010.
354.
Frei N. ** National socialist rule in Germany: the Führer State 1933-1945. Oxford: Blackwell; 1993.
355.
Griffin R. ** Documents 1 - 15. Fascism. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1995.
356.
Delzell CF. ** Mediterranean fascism. New York: Walker and Company; 1971.
357.
Bosworth, Richard J. B. ** Mussolini [Internet]. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1630355
358.
Blinkhorn M. Fascists and Conservatives: The Radical Right and the Establishment in Twentieth-Century Europe [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1990. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=179005
359.
Lyttelton A, MyiLibrary. * The seizure of power: fascism in Italy, 1919-1929 [Internet]. Rev. ed., [3rd. ed.]. Abingdon: Routledge; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=214549
360.
De Grand AJ. * The Italian Nationalist Association and the rise of fascism in Italy. Lincoln, Neb: University of Nebraska Press; 1978.
361.
Carsten FL. * The rise of fascism. 2nd ed. London: Batsford; 1980.
362.
Corner P. * State and society, 1901-1922, from:  Liberal and fascist Italy, 1900-1945. In: Liberal and fascist Italy, 1900-1945 [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4962744
363.
Corner P, Procacci G. * The Italian experience of ‘total’ mobilization, 1915-20. In: Horne J, editor. State, society, and mobilization in Europe during the First World War [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1997. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474523670005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
364.
Berghaus G. * Futurism and politics: between anarchist rebellion and fascist reaction, 1909-1944. Providence, R.I.: Berghahn Books; 1996.
365.
Petersen J. * Violence in Italian Fascism, 1919-1925. In: Social protest, violence and terror in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Europe. London: Macmillan Press; 1982.
366.
Gentile E. * Chapter 1 - The Holy Militia. In: The sacralization of politics in fascist Italy. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1996.
367.
Clark M, University of Reading. Centre for the Advanced Study of Italian Society. * The failure of revolution in Italy, 1919-1920. Vol. no. 5. [Reading]: University of Reading, Department of Italian Studies; 1973.
368.
Abse T. * The Rise of Fascism in an Industrial City: The Case of Livorno 1918- 1922. In: Rethinking Italian fascism: capitalism, populism and culture. London: Lawrence and Wishart; 1986.
369.
Snowden FM. * The fascist revolution in Tuscany, 1919-1922. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1989.
370.
Corner P. * Fascism in Ferrara, 1915-1925. London: Oxford University Press; 1975.
371.
Ledeen MA. * The first duce: D’Annunzio at Fiume. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 1977.
372.
Woodhouse JR. * Gabriele d’Annunzio: defiant archangel. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1998.
373.
Adamson WL. * Avant-garde modernism and Italian Fascism: cultural politics in the era of Mussolini. Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 2001 Jan;6(2):230–48.
374.
CAPOCCIA G. * Defending democracy: Reactions to political extremism in inter-war Europe. European Journal of Political Research. 2001 Jun;39(4):431–60.
375.
Carsten FL. * Fascist movements in Austria: from Schönerer to Hitler. Vol. v. 7. London: Sage Publications; 1977.
376.
De Grand AJ. * Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany: the ‘fascist’ style of rule. London: Routledge; 1995.
377.
De Grand AJ. * Italian fascism: its origins & development. 3rd ed. Lincoln, Neb: University of Nebraska Press; 2000.
378.
Giles GJ. * Students and National Socialism in Germany. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1985.
379.
Griffin R. * The nature of fascism. London: Routledge; 1993.
380.
Griffin R. Fascism. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1995.
381.
Griffin R. * International fascism: theories, causes and the new consensus. London: Arnold; 1998.
382.
Larsen SU, Hagtvet B, Myklebust JP. * Who were the fascists: social roots of European fascism. Bergen: Universitetsforlaget; 1980.
383.
Ioanid R. The sword of the archangel: fascist ideology in Romania. Vol. no. 292. Boulder [Colo.]: East European Monographs; 1990.
384.
Kallis A. Fascist Ideology: Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany, 1922-1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=165696
385.
Karvonen L. From white to blue-and-black: Finnish fascism in the inter-war era. Vol. 36. Helsinki: Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters; 1988.
386.
Kershaw I. * Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
387.
Laqueur W. * Fascism: a reader’s guide : analyses, interpretations, bibliography. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin; 1979.
388.
Laqueur W. * Fascism: past, present, future. New York: Oxford University Press; 1996.
389.
Mosse GL. International fascism: new thoughts and new approaches. Vol. 4. London: Sage Publications; 1979.
390.
Mosse GL. The fascist revolution: toward a general theory of fascism. 1st ed. New York: H. Fertig;
391.
Orlow D. * The history of the Nazi Party. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press; 1969.
392.
Payne SG. Fascism in Spain, 1923-1977 [Internet]. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1999. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3445187
393.
Payne SG. A History of Fascism, 1914-1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1996. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3445236
394.
Soucy R. * French fascism: the first wave, 1924-1933. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1986.
395.
Sternhell Z. * Neither right nor left: fascist ideology in France. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1986.
396.
Woolf SJ. * Fascism in Europe. London: Methuen; 1981.
397.
Brendon P. ** The dark valley: a panorama of the 1930s. Vol. 447. London: Pimlico; 2001.
398.
Blinkhorn M. ** Spain in conflict 1931-1939: democracy and its enemies. London: Sage; 1986.
399.
Carsten FL. ** Fascist movements in Austria: from Schönerer to Hitler. Vol. v. 7. London: Sage Publications; 1977.
400.
Rothschild J. ** East Central Europe between the two World Wars. Vol. v. 9. Seattle, Wash: University of Washington Press; 1974.
401.
Hobsbawm EJ. ** Age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991. London: Abacus; 1995.
402.
Carr EH, Cox M. * The twenty years’ crisis, 1919-1939: an introduction to the study of international relations. Basingstoke: Palgrave; 2001.
403.
Joll J. * Europe since 1870: an international history. 4th ed. London: Penguin; 1990.
404.
Kitchen M. * Europe between the wars: a political history [Internet]. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2013. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1596781
405.
Luebbert GM, Collier D, Lipset SM. Liberalism, Fascism, or Social Democracy: Social Classes and the Political Origins of Regimes in Interwar Europe [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1991. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=430315
406.
Maier CS. * Recasting bourgeois Europe: stabilization in France, Germany, and Italy in the decade after World War I. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1975.
407.
Mazower M. * Dark continent: Europe’s twentieth century. London: Penguin; 1999.
408.
Overy RJ. * The inter-war crisis 1919-1939 [Internet]. 2nd rev. ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2014. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1710642
409.
Bahr E. Weimar on the Pacific: German exile culture in Los Angeles and the crisis of modernism. 1st ed. Vol. 41. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2007.
410.
Claussen D, Livingstone R. Theodor W. Adorno: One Last Genius [Internet]. 1st ed. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 2008. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3300037
411.
Koch G, Gaines J. Siegfried Kracauer: An Introduction [Internet]. 1st ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=617323
412.
Robertson R, Robertson R. The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Mann. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2002.
413.
Smedley N. A Divided World: Hollywood Cinema and Emigre Directors in the Era of Roosevelt and Hitler, 1933-1948 [Internet]. 1st ed. Bristol: Intellect Books Ltd; 2011. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=685169
414.
Ritter GA. German Refugee Historians and Friedrich Meinecke: Letters and Documents, 1910-1977 [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.49. New York: BRILL; 2010. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=634949
415.
Mombauer A. ** The origins of the First World War: controversies and consensus [Internet]. Harlow: Longman; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1574777
416.
Fulbrook M, Breuilly J. ** German history since 1800. London: Bloomsbury Academic; 2010.
417.
Jarausch KH. After Hitler: recivilizing Germans, 1945-1995. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2006.
418.
Kettenacker L. * Germany since 1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1997.
419.
Kramer A. * The West German economy, 1945-1955. Oxford: Berg; 1991.
420.
Merritt RL. * Democracy imposed: U.S. occupation policy and the German public, 1945-1949. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1995.
421.
Moeller RG. * West Germany under construction: politics, society, and culture in the Adenauer era. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press; 1997.
422.
Turner ID. * Reconstruction in post-war Germany: British occupation policy, and the Western zones, 1945-55. Oxford: Berg; 1989.
423.
Van Hook JC. Rebuilding Germany: the creation of the social market economy, 1945-1957 [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2004. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474210520005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
424.
Sources and Bibliography.
425.
Germany. Auswärtiges Amt. Akten zur deutschen auswärtigen Politik, 1918-1945. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht; 1966.
426.
Woodward EL, Butler R d’Olier, Bury JPT, Medlicott WN, Great Britain. Foreign Office. Documents on British foreign policy, 1919-1939. London: H.M.S.O; 1947.
427.
France. Commission de publication des documents relatifs aux origines de la guerre 1939-1945. Documents diplomatiques français 1932-1939. Paris: Imprimerie nationale; 1963.
428.
United States. Department of State. Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States: 1919: The Paris Peace Conference. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office; 1942.
429.
Adamthwaite AP. The Lost peace: international relations in Europe, 1918-1939. London: Edward Arnold; 1980.
430.
Burdick CB, Lutz RH. The political institutions of the German revolution, 1918-1919. New York: Published for the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., by F.A. Praeger; 1966.
431.
Kaes A, Jay M, Dimendberg E. The Weimar Republic sourcebook. Vol. 3. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
432.
Noakes J, Pridham G. Nazism 1919-1945: a documentary reader. Vols 6, 8, 13. Exeter: University of Exeter; 1983.
433.
Röhl JCG. From Bismarck to Hitler: the problem of continuity in German history. London: Longmans; 1970.
434.
Sax BC, Kuntz D. Inside Hitler’s Germany: a documentary history of life in the Third Reich. Lexington, Mass: D.C. Heath; 1992.
435.
Stachura PD. The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
436.
D’Abernon EV, Gerothwohl MA. An ambassador of peace: pages from the diary of Viscount D’Abernon (Berlin, 1920-1926). London: Hodder and Stoughton; 1929.
437.
Goebbels J, Heiber H. Das Tagebuch von Joseph Goebbels, 1925/26. 2. Aufl. Vol. Nr. 1. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt; 1961.
438.
Heuss T. Erinnerungen 1905-1933. Tubingen: Rainer Wunderlich Verlag Hermann Leins; 1963.
439.
Hitler A. Mein Kampf. [S.l.]: Elite Minds; 2010.
440.
Kessler H. The diaries of a cosmopolitan: 1918-1937. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1971.
441.
Rathenau W, Pogge von Strandmann H. Walther Rathenau, industrialist, banker, intellectual, and politician: notes and diaries, 1907-1922. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 2001.
442.
Gustav Stresemann. SL Stresemann, G., Diaries, Letters and Papers. Berlin: Ullstein; 1932.
443.
Institute of Historical Research | The national centre for history [Internet]. Available from: http://www.history.ac.uk/
444.
WORLDWAR1.com - World War I / The Great War / 1914-1918 [Internet]. Available from: http://www.worldwar1.com/
445.
The Great War Web Site [Internet]. Available from: http://www.pitt.edu/~pugachev/greatwar/ww1.html
446.
World War I Document Archive [Internet]. Available from: https://wwi.lib.byu.edu/index.php/Main_Page
447.
Internet History Sourcebooks [Internet]. Available from: https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/modsbook.asp
448.
EuroDocs [Internet]. Available from: https://eudocs.lib.byu.edu/index.php/Main_Page
449.
History of Germany: Primary Documents - EuroDocs [Internet]. Available from: https://eudocs.lib.byu.edu/index.php/History_of_Germany:_Primary_Documents
450.
German History in Documents and Images [Internet]. Available from: http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/
451.
Vincent CP, Ritter H. A historical dictionary of Germany’s Weimar Republic, 1918-1933 [Internet]. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press; 1997. Available from: http://librarysearch.le.ac.uk/openurl/44UOLE/44UOLE_VU1?u.ignore_date_coverage=true&rft.mms_id=991009337498602746
452.
Berger S. ’The Attempt at Democratisation under Weimar. In: Garrard J, editor. European Democratization since 1800 : Past and Present [Internet]. Palgrave Macmillan Limited; 1999. p. 95–115. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=289041
453.
Berghahn VR, Kitchen M, Carsten FL. Germany in the age of total war. London: Croom Helm; 1981.
454.
Richard Bessel. Germany after the First World War. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1995.
455.
Bessel R, Feuchtwanger EJ. Social change and political development in Weimar Germany. London: Croom Helm; 1981.
456.
Blackbourn D, Eley G. The Peculiarities of German History: Bourgeois Society and Politics in Nineteenth-Century Germany [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1984. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=684551
457.
Brendon P. The dark valley: a panorama of the 1930s. Vol. 447. London: Pimlico; 2001.
458.
Broszat M. Hitler and the collapse of Weimar Germany. Oxford: Berg; 1987.
459.
Carr EH, Cox M. The twenty years’ crisis, 1919-1939: an introduction to the study of international relations. Basingstoke: Palgrave; 2001.
460.
Chickering R, Förster S, editors. The shadows of total war: Europe, East Asia, and the United States, 1919-1939 [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2003. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474266630005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
461.
Cohrs PO. The unfinished peace after World War I: America, Britain and the stabilisation of Europe, 1919-1932 [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2006. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474370230005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
462.
Eley G. From unification to Nazism: reinterpreting the German past. Boston [Mass.]: Allen & Unwin; 1986.
463.
Evans RJ. Rereading German history: from unification to reunification 1800-1996 [Internet]. Abingdon: Routledge; 2015. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3569272
464.
Feldman GD. The Weimar Republic: A Problem of Modernization. Archiv Fur Sozialgeschicht. 1986;26:1–27.
465.
Feuchtwanger EJ. From Weimar to Hitler: Germany, 1918-33. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1995.
466.
Fischer F, Fletcher R. From Kaiserreich to Third Reich: elements of continuity in German history, 1871-1945. London: Allen & Unwin; 1986.
467.
Föllmer M, Graf R. Die ‘Krise’ der Weimarer Republik: zur Kritik eines Deutungsmusters. Frankfurt am Main: Campus; 2005.
468.
Frankel R. Bismarck’s Shadow: The Cult of Leadership and the Transformation of the German Right, 1898-1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=278911
469.
Geary D. Employers, Workers, and the Collapse of the Weimar Republic. In: Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990. p. 92–119.
470.
Geary D. Hitler and Nazism. 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 2000.
471.
Henig R. Versailles and After, 1919-1933 [Internet]. 2nd ed. Florence: Taylor & Francis Group; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=178306
472.
Henig R. The Weimar Republic 1919-1933 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1998. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=168956
473.
Joll J. Europe since 1870: an international history. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1973.
474.
Jones LE, Retallack JN, German History Society (Great Britain). Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
475.
Kershaw I. Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990.
476.
Kitching CJ. Britain and the Problem of International Disarmament: 1919-1934 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1999. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=165585
477.
Jürgen Kocka. Asymmetrical Historical Comparison: The Case of the German Sonderweg. History and Theory [Internet]. 1999;38(1):40–50. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2505315
478.
Kolb E. The Weimar Republic. 2nd ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2005.
479.
Kruedener J von. Economic crisis and political collapse: the Weimar Republic, 1924-1933. Oxford: Berg; 1990.
480.
Luebbert GM, Collier D, Lipset SM. Liberalism, Fascism, or Social Democracy: Social Classes and the Political Origins of Regimes in Interwar Europe [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1991. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=430315
481.
Margaret Macmillan. Paris 1919 : Six Months That Changed the World. Random House Trade Paperbacks;
482.
Maier CS. Recasting bourgeois Europe: stabilization in France, Germany, and Italy in the decade after World War I. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1975.
483.
Meinecke F. The German catastrophe: reflections and recollections. Vol. no. 160. Boston: Beacon Press; 1963.
484.
Mommsen H. From Weimar to Auschwitz: essays in German history. Cambridge: Polity Press; 1991.
485.
Mommsen H. The rise and fall of Weimar democracy. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press; 1996.
486.
Mühle E. Germany and the European East in the Twentieth Century [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc; 2003. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=554589
487.
Nicholls AJ. Weimar and the rise of Hitler. 4th ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 2000.
488.
Overy RJ. The inter-war crisis 1919-1939 [Internet]. 2nd rev. ed. Abingdon: Routledge; 2014. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1710642
489.
Neal Pease. Poland, the United States, and the Stabilization of Europe, 1919-1933 [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1986. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=253398
490.
Peukert D, Deveson R. The Weimar Republic: the crisis of classical modernity. London: Penguin; 1993.
491.
Angress WT. Stillborn revolution: the Communist bid for power in Germany, 1921-1923. Port Washington: Kennikat Press; 1972.
492.
Berghahn VR, Kitchen M, Carsten FL. Germany in the age of total war. London: Croom Helm; 1981.
493.
Richard Bessel. Germany after the First World War [Internet]. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4963238
494.
Pierre Broué. The German Revolution, 1917-1923 [Internet]. Leiden: Brill; 2005. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3003966
495.
Carsten FL. Revolution in central Europe 1918-1919. London: Wildwood House; 1988.
496.
Carsten FL. The Reichswehr and politics, 1918 to 1933. Vol. 102. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1973.
497.
Comfort RA. Revolutionary Hamburg: labor politics in the early Weimar Republic. Stanford: Stanford University Press; 1966.
498.
Diehl JM. Paramilitary politics in Weimar Germany. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 1977.
499.
Dorpalen A. Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic [Internet]. Princeton University Press; First Edition edition; 1964. Available from: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Hindenburg-Weimar-Republic-Dorpalen/dp/B0007DMIA0/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1522228047&sr=1-2&keywords=Hindenburg+and+the+Weimar+Republic
500.
Eberle M. World War I and the Weimar artists: Dix, Grosz, Beckmann, Schlemmer. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1985.
501.
Eksteins M. Rites of spring: the Great War and the birth of the Modern Age. 1st Mariner Books ed. Boston, Mass: Houghton Mifflin; 2000.
502.
Feldman GD. Army, industry and labor in Germany 1914-1918. Providence: Berg; 1992.
503.
Ferro M. The Great War, 1914-1918. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul; 1973.
504.
Fritz Fischer. Twenty-Five Years Later: Looking Back at the ‘Fischer Controversy’ and Its Consequences. Central European History [Internet]. 1988;21(3):207–23. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546121
505.
Sean A. Forner. War Commemoration and the Republic in Crisis: Weimar Germany and the Neue Wache. Central European History [Internet]. 2002;35(4):513–49. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4547242
506.
Gardner LC. Safe for Democracy: The Anglo-American Response to Revolution, 1913-1923 [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1987. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=272644
507.
Gatens RM. Prelude to Gleichschaltung: The University of Heidelberg and the E.J. Gumbel Controversies, 1924 and 1932. European History Quarterly. 2001 Jan;31(1):65–99.
508.
Geary D. ’Revolutionary Berlin 1917-1920. In: Challenges of labour: Central and Western Europe, 1917-1920 [Internet]. London: Routledge; 1993. p. 24–50. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=169545
509.
Robert Gerwarth. The Central European Counter-Revolution: Paramilitary Violence in Germany, Austria and Hungary after the Great War. Past & Present [Internet]. 2008;(200):175–209. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25096723
510.
Goldstein E. Winning the peace: British diplomatic strategy, peace planning, and the Paris Peace Conference, 1916-1920. Oxford: Clarendon; 1991.
511.
Gregor N, Roemer N, Roseman M. German History from the Margins [Internet]. 1st ed. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=282522
512.
Gregory A. Peculiarities of the English? War, Violence and Politics: 1900–1939. Journal of Modern European History [Internet]. 2003;1:44–59. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.17104/1611-8944_2003_1_44
513.
Hagemann K, Schüler-Springorum S. Home/front: the military, war and gender in twentieth-century Germany. Oxford: Berg; 2002.
514.
Hardach G. The First World War, 1914-1918. Vol. 2. London: Allen Lane; 1977.
515.
Peter Hayes. ‘A Question Mark with Epaulettes’? Kurt von Schleicher and Weimar Politic. The Journal of Modern History [Internet]. 1980;52(1):35–65. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1877954
516.
Kent B. The spoils of war: the politics, economics and diplomacy of reparations 1918-1932. Oxford: Clarendon; 1989.
517.
Löwenthal R. ’The ‘Missing Revolution’ in Industrial Societies: Comparative Reflections on a German Problem. In: Germany in the age of total war. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 240–57.
518.
Mommsen H. The German Revolution. In: Social change and political development in Weimar Germany. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 21–54.
519.
Mommsen WJ. Max Weber and the Peace Treaty of Versailles’. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 535–47.
520.
Morgan DW. The socialist left and the German revolution: a history of the German Independent Social Democratic Party, 1917-1922. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 1975.
521.
William Mulligan. Civil-Military Relations in the Early Weimar Republic. The Historical Journal [Internet]. 2002;45(4):819–41. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3133530
522.
Offer A. The First World War: an agrarian interpretation. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1989.
523.
Rürup R. The problem of revolution in Germany 1789-1989. Oxford: Berg; 2000.
524.
Schumann D. Europa, der Erste Weltkrieg und die Nachkriegszeit: eine Kontinuität der Gewalt. Journal of Modern European History [Internet]. 2003;1:23–43. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.17104/1611-8944_2003_1_24
525.
Silverman DP. Reconstructing Europe after the Great War. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1982.
526.
Stevenson D. French war aims against Germany, 1914-1919. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1982.
527.
Strohn, Matthias. Hans von Seeckt and His Vision of a ‘Modern Army’. War In History [Internet]. 12:318–37. Available from: https://search.proquest.com/docview/224165465/shibboleth?accountid=8018
528.
Jürgen Tampke. The Ruhr and revolution. Canberra: Australian National University Press; 1978.
529.
Verhey J. The spirit of 1914: militarism, myth and mobilization in Germany [Internet]. Vol. 10. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2000. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474593520005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
530.
Weitz ED. Creating German communism, 1890-1990: from popular protests to socialist state. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1997.
531.
Williams B. Review Article: The End of a European Dream? Recent Writings on Revolution in Europe. Journal of Contemporary History. 2002 Jul;37(3):457–65.
532.
Wirsching A. Political Violence in France and Italy after 1918’. Journal of Modern European History [Internet]. 2003;1:44–59. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.17104/1611-8944_2003_1_60
533.
Wrigley C. Challenges of labour: Central and Western Europe, 1917-1920 [Internet]. London: Routledge; 1993. Available from: http://www.NOTTINGHAM.eblib.com/EBLWeb/patron/?target=patron&extendedid=E_398523_0
534.
Wrobel P. The Seeds of Violence. The Brutalization of an East European Region. Journal of Modern European History [Internet]. 2003;1:125–49. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.17104/1611-8944_2003_1_125
535.
Ziemann B. Germany after the First World War – A Violent Society? Results and Im-plications of Recent Research on Weimar Germany. Journal of Modern European History [Internet]. 2003;1:80–95. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.17104/1611-8944_2003_1_80
536.
Ziemann B. War Experiences in Rural Germany: 1914-1923 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=487187
537.
Bracher KD. Democracy and the Power Vacuum: The Problem of the Party State during the Disintegration of the Weimar Republic. In: Germany in the age of total war. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 189–202.
538.
Buchanan T. Anti-fascism and Democracy in the 1930s. European History Quarterly. 2002 Jan;32(1):39–57.
539.
Caplan J. Government without administration: state and civil service in Weimar and Nazi Germany. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1988.
540.
CAPOCCIA G. Defending democracy: Reactions to political extremism in inter-war Europe. European Journal of Political Research. 2001 Jun;39(4):431–60.
541.
Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic [Internet]. Princeton University Press; First Edition edition; 1964. Available from: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Hindenburg-Weimar-Republic-Dorpalen/dp/B0007DMIA0/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1522683131&sr=8-1&keywords=Hindenburg+and+the+Weimar+Republic
542.
Dyzenhaus D. Legality and legitimacy: Carl Schmitt, Hans Kelson and Hermann Heller in Weimar. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1997.
543.
Eksteins M. The limits of reason: the German democratic press and the collapse of Weimar democracy. London: Oxford University Press; 1975.
544.
Falter J. The Social Bases of Political Cleavages in the Weimar Republic. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 371–99.
545.
Falter J. Unemployment and the Radicalization of the German Electorate. In: Unemployment and the Great Depression in Weimar Germany. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1986. p. 187–208.
546.
Finn JE. Constitutions in Crisis: Political Violence and the Rule of Law [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1990. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=271241
547.
Finn JE. Constitutional Dissolution in the Weimar Republic. In: Constitutions in Crisis: Political Violence and the Rule of Law [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1990. p. 139–78. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=271241
548.
Fowkes B. Communism in Germany under the Weimar republic. London: Macmillan; 1984.
549.
Frye BB. Liberal Democrats in the Weimar Republic: the history of the German Democratic Party and the German State Party. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press; 1985.
550.
Gatens RM. Prelude to Gleichschaltung: The University of Heidelberg and the E.J. Gumbel Controversies, 1924 and 1932. European History Quarterly. 2001 Jan;31(1):65–99.
551.
Gerwarth R. The Bismarck Myth: Weimar Germany and the Legacy of the Iron Chancellor [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 2005. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=422579
552.
Greenberg UE. Criminalization: Carl Schmitt and Walter Benjamin’s concept of criminal politics. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):305–19.
553.
Guttsman WL. The German Social Democratic Party, 1875-1933: from ghetto to government. London: Allen & Unwin; 1981.
554.
Hertzman L. DNVP: right-wing opposition in the Weimar Republic, 1918-1924. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press; 1963.
555.
Hunt RN. German Social Democracy, 1918-1933. Vol. 79. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1964.
556.
Larry Eugene Jones. ‘The Dying Middle’: Weimar Germany and the Fragmentation of Bourgeois Politics. Central European History [Internet]. 1972;5(1):23–54. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4545621
557.
Jones LE. German liberalism and the dissolution of the Weimar party system, 1918-1933. Chapel Hill, [N.C.]: University of North Carolina Press; 1988.
558.
Jones LE, Retallack JN, German History Society (Great Britain). Generational Conflict and the Problem of Political Mobilization in the Weimar Republic. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 347–71.
559.
Larry Eugene Jones. German Conservatism at the Crossroads: Count Kuno von Westarp and the Struggle for Control of the DNVP, 1928-30. Contemporary European History [Internet]. 2009;18(2):147–77. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40542865
560.
Jones LE, Retallack JN, German History Society (Great Britain). Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
561.
Jones LE, Retallack JN. Between reform, reaction, and resistance: studies in the history of German conservatism from 1789 to 1945. Providence: Berg; 1993.
562.
Koskenniemi M. Chapter 3 - International law as philosophy: Germany 1871-1933. In: The gentle civilizer of nations: the rise and fall of international law, 1870-1960 [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2002. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474593510005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
563.
LaPorte NH. ‘Stalinization’ and its Limits in the Saxon KPD, 1925–28. European History Quarterly. 2001 Oct;31(4):549–90.
564.
Roland V. Layton, Jr. The ‘Völkischer Beobachter,’ 1920-1933: The Nazi Party Newspaper in the Weimar Era. Central European History [Internet]. 1970;3(4):353–82. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4545584
565.
Lidtke VL. Abstract Art and Left-Wing Politics in the Weimar Republic. Central European History. 2004 Mar;37(01):49–90.
566.
Luebbert GM, Collier D, Lipset SM. Liberalism, Fascism, or Social Democracy: Social Classes and the Political Origins of Regimes in Interwar Europe [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1991. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=430315
567.
Maier CS. Recasting bourgeois Europe: stabilization in France, Germany, and Italy in the decade after World War I. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1975.
568.
John P. McCormick. Fear, Technology, and the State: Carl Schmitt, Leo Strauss, and the Revival of Hobbes in Weimar and National Socialist Germany. Political Theory [Internet]. 1994;22(4):619–52. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/192042
569.
McCormick JP. Irrational Choice and Mortal Combat as Political Destiny: The Essential Carl Schmitt. Annual Review of Political Science. 2007 Jun;10(1):315–39.
570.
Mommsen H. Social Democracy on the Defensive. The Immobility of the SPD and the Rise of National Socialism. In: From Weimar to Auschwitz. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1992.
571.
Morgan DW. The socialist left and the German revolution: a history of the German Independent Social Democratic Party, 1917-1922. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 1975.
572.
Muller, J. Carl Schmitt, Hans Freyer and theradical conservative critique of liberal democracy in the Weimar republic. Muller, J [Internet]. 12:695–715. Available from: https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/imp/hpt/1991/00000012/00000004/269
573.
Orlow D. Weimar Prussia, 1918-1925: the unlikely rock of democracy. Pittsburgh, Pa: University of Pittsburgh Press; 1986.
574.
Patch WL. Heinrich Brüning and the dissolution of the Weimar Republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998.
575.
Scheuerman, B. The rule of law under siege: Carl Schmitt and the death of the Weimar Republic. Scheuerman, B [Internet]. 14:265–80. Available from: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/imp/hpt/1993/00000014/00000002/219
576.
Scheuerman WE. The rule of law under siege: selected essays of Franz L. Neumann and Otto Kirchheimer. Vol. 9. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1996.
577.
Jacobson AJ, Schlink B. Introduction: Constitutional Crisis: The German and the American Experience, from: Weimar : A Jurisprudence of Crisis. In: Weimar: a jurisprudence of crisis [Internet]. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2000. p. 1–40. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224557
578.
Slomp, Gabriella. THE THEORY OF THE PARTISAN: CARL SCHMITT’S NEGLECTED LEGACY. Slomp, Gabriella [Internet]. 26:502–19. Available from: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/imp/hpt/2005/00000026/00000003/art00006
579.
Sneeringer J. Winning Women’s Votes: Propaganda and Politics in Weimar Germany [Internet]. 1st ed. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=413427
580.
Stackelberg R, Winkle SA. The Nazi Germany Sourcebook: An Anthology of Texts [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=170682
581.
Stirk, P. Hugo Preuss, German political thought and the Weimar constitution. Stirk, P [Internet]. 23:497–516. Available from: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/imp/hpt/2002/00000023/00000003/323
582.
Thornhill CJ. Carl Schmitt after the deluge: a review of the recent literature. History of European Ideas. 2000 Oct;26(3–4):225–40.
583.
Nikolaus Wachsmann. Between Reform and Repression: Imprisonment in Weimar Germany. The Historical Journal [Internet]. 2002;45(2):411–32. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3133651
584.
D. P. Walker. The German Nationalist People’s Party: The Conservative Dilemma in the Weimar Republic. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1979;14(4):627–47. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260179
585.
Weitz ED. Creating German communism, 1890-1990: from popular protests to socialist state. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1997.
586.
Wetzell RF. Inventing the criminal: a history of German criminology, 1880-1945 [Internet]. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2000. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=7783333040005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
587.
Heinrich August Winkler. CHOOSING THE LESSER EVIL - THE GERMAN SOCIAL-DEMOCRATS AND THE FALL OF THE WEIMAR-REPUBLIC. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1990;25(2):205–27. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260730
588.
Winter J. Dreams of Peace and Freedom: Utopian Moments in the Twentieth Century [Internet]. 1st ed. New Haven: Yale University Press; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3419950
589.
Woods R. The conservative revolution in the Weimar Republic. Basingstoke: MacMillan; 1996.
590.
Wright JRC. ‘Above parties’: the political attitudes of the German protestant church leadership 1918-1933. London: Oxford University Press; 1974.
591.
Aldcroft DH, Aldcroft PDH. Europe’s Third World: The European Periphery in the Interwar Years [Internet]. 1st ed. Brookfield: Taylor & Francis Group; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=429643
592.
Ambrosius LE. Woodrow Wilson and the American diplomatic tradition: the treaty fight in perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1987.
593.
Blackwood WL. German Hegemony and the Socialist International’s Place in Interwar European Diplomacy. European History Quarterly. 2001 Jan;31(1):101–40.
594.
Boemeke MF, Gläser E, Feldman GD, German Historical Institute (Washington, D.C.). The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998.
595.
Boyce R. French Foreign and Defence Policy, 1918-1940: The Decline and Fall of a Great Power [Internet]. 1st ed. Florence: Taylor & Francis Group; 1998. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=235202
596.
Burgwyn HJ. Italian foreign policy in the interwar period, 1918-1940. Westport, Conn: Praeger; 1997.
597.
Chickering R, Förster S, editors. The shadows of total war: Europe, East Asia, and the United States, 1919-1939 [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2003. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474633410005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
598.
Conrad S, Sachsenmaier D, Palgrave Connect (Online Service). Competing visions of world order: global moments and movements, 1880s-1930s [Internet]. New York: Palgrave; 2007. Available from: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230604285
599.
Michael L. Dockrill and John, Dr Fisher. Paris Peace Conference, 1919 : Peace without Victory? [Internet]. Palgrave Macmillan Limited; 2001. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=496109
600.
Dyck HL. Weimar Germany & Soviet Russia, 1926-1933: a study in diplomatic instability. London: Chatto & Windus; 1966.
601.
Ferguson N. The Balance of Payments Question: Versailles and After. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 401–41.
602.
Goldstein E. Winning the peace: British diplomatic strategy, peace planning, and the Paris Peace Conference, 1916-1920. Oxford: Clarendon; 1991.
603.
Goldstein E. The First World War Peace Settlements, 1919-1925 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1474411
604.
Henig R. Versailles and After, 1919-1933 [Internet]. 2nd ed. Florence: Taylor & Francis Group; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=178306
605.
Hiden J. The Baltic states and Weimar Ostpolitik. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1987.
606.
Huth PK, Allee TL. The democratic peace and territorial conflict in the twentieth century [Internet]. Vol. 82. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2002. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474523640005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
607.
Jacobson J. Locarno diplomacy: Germany and the West, 1925-1929. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1972.
608.
Kaplan MA, editor. Jewish daily life in Germany, 1618-1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2005.
609.
Edward David Keeton. Briand’s Locarno policy : French economics, politics and diplomacy, 1925-1929. New York: Garland; 1987.
610.
Kent B. The spoils of war: the politics, economics and diplomacy of reparations 1918-1932. Oxford: Clarendon; 1989.
611.
Keynes JM. The economic consequences of the peace. London: Macmillan; 1919.
612.
Kindleberger CP. A financial history of Western Europe. London: Allen & Unwin; 1984.
613.
Kochan L. Russia and the Weimar Republic. Cambridge: Bowes & Bowes; 1954.
614.
Lentin A. Lloyd George and the lost peace: from Versailles to Hitler, 1919-1940. Basingstoke: Palgrave; 2001.
615.
Lesaffer R, editor. Peace treaties and international law in European history: from the late Middle Ages to World War One [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2004. Available from: https://nottingham-uk.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=9474370220005561&institutionId=5561&customerId=5560
616.
Link AS. Woodrow Wilson: revolution, war, and peace. Arlington Heights, Ill: AHM Pub. Corp; 1979.
617.
Manela E. ’ ’Dawn of a new era? The ‘Wilsonian Moment’ in Colonial Contexts and the Transformation of World Order, 1917-1923. In: Competing visions of world order: global moments and movements, 1880s-1930s [Internet]. New York: Palgrave; 2007. p. 121–50. Available from: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230604285
618.
Marks S. The illusion of peace: international relations in Europe, 1918-1933. London: Macmillan; 1976.
619.
Markwell D, Oxford University Press. John Maynard Keynes and international relations: economic paths to war and peace [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2006. Available from: http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/oso/public/content/politicalscience/9780198292364/toc.html
620.
Mayer AJ. Politics and diplomacy of peacemaking: containment and counterrevolution at Versailles. 1918-1919. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 1968.
621.
McDougall WA. France’s Rhineland diplomacy, 1914-1924 : the last bid for a balance of power in Europe [Internet]. Princeton University Press; 1978. Available from: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Frances-Rhineland-Diplomacy-1914-1924-McDougall/dp/B004QS6FSS/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1522747967&sr=1-1&keywords=France%27s+Rhineland+diplomacy%2C+1914-1924+%3A+the+last+bid+for+a+balance+of+power+in+Europe
622.
McKercher BJC. Anglo-American relations in the 1920s: the struggle for supremacy. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1991.
623.
Mommsen WJ. Max Weber and the Peace Treaty of Versailles. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 535–47.
624.
Murphy DT. The heroic earth: geopolitical thought in Weimar Germany, 1918-1933. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press; 1997.
625.
Newton DJ. British policy and the Weimar Republic, 1918-1919. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1997.
626.
Northedge FS, London School of Economics and Political Science. The troubled giant: Britain among the great powers, 1916-1939. London: London School of Economics and Political Science; 1966.
627.
Northedge FS. The League of Nations: its life and times 1920-1946. Leicester: Leicester University Press; 1986.
628.
Rathenau W, Pogge von Strandmann H. Walther Rathenau, industrialist, banker, intellectual, and politician: notes and diaries, 1907-1922. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 2001.
629.
Georg Schild. Between Ideology and Real Politics : Woodrow Wilson and the Russian Revolution, 1917-1921 [Internet]. Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3000141
630.
Russian-German Special Relations in the Twentieth Century : A Closed Chapter? [Internet]. 1st ed. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=487184
631.
Schwabe K. Germany’s Peace Aims and the Domestic and International Constraints. In: The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Washington: German Historical Institute; 1998. p. 37–69.
632.
Sharp A. The Versailles settlement: peacemaking in Paris, 1919. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1991.
633.
Shimazu N, Stockwin JAA, Stockwin JAA. Japan, Race and Equality: The Racial Equality Proposal Of 1919 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1998. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=168990
634.
Peter D. Stachura. Poland in the Twentieth Century [Internet]. Palgrave Macmillan; 26AD. Available from: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Poland-Twentieth-Century-Peter-Stachura/dp/033375266X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1522748625&sr=1-1&keywords=9780333752661&dpID=41vKEPLPu2L&preST=_SY291_BO1,204,203,200_QL40_&dpSrc=srch
635.
Stevenson D. French war aims against Germany, 1914-1919. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1982.
636.
Thorne CG. The limits of foreign policy: the West, the League and the Far Eastern crisis of 1931-1933. London: Hamilton; 1972.
637.
Trachtenberg M. Reparation in world politics: France and European economic diplomacy, 1916-1923. New York: Columbia University Press; 1980.
638.
Turner HA. Stresemann and the politics of the Weimar Republic. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press; 1979.
639.
Walters FP, Royal Institute of International Affairs. A history of the League of Nations. London: Oxford University Press; 1960.
640.
Gustav Stresemann : Weimar’s Greatest Statesman [Internet]. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=829410
641.
Oliver Zimmer. Nationalism in Europe, 1890-1940 [Internet]. Palgrave Macmillan; 2003. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3027501
642.
David Abraham. Conflicts within German Industry and the Collapse of the Weimar Republic. Past & Present [Internet]. 1980;(88):88–128. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/650555
643.
Abrams L, Harvey E. Gender relations in German history: power, agency and experience from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. London: UCL Press; 1996.
644.
Aldcroft DH. From Versailles to Wall Street, 1919-1929. Vol. 3. London: Allen Lane; 1977.
645.
Ankum K von. Women in the metropolis: gender and modernity in Weimar culture. Vol. 11. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1997.
646.
Ashkenazi O. Prisoners’ fantasies in Weimar film. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):290–304.
647.
Balderston T. The origins and course of the German economic crisis: November 1923 to May 1932. Vol. Bd. 2. Berlin: Haude & Spener; 1993.
648.
Baranowski S. The Sanctity of Rural Life: Nobility, Protestantism, and Nazism in Weimar Prussia [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=273193
649.
Baranowski S. East Elbian Landed Elites and Germany’s Turn to Fascism: The Sonderweg Controversy Revisited. European History Quarterly. 1996 Apr;26(2):209–40.
650.
Bessel R, Feuchtwanger EJ. Social change and political development in Weimar Germany. London: Croom Helm; 1981.
651.
Blackbourn D, Evans RJ. The German bourgeoisie: essays on the social history of the German middle class from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century. London: Routledge; 1991.
652.
Boak H. Women in Weimar Journalism. In: Social change and political development in Weimar Germany. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 155–73.
653.
Boak H. Women in Weimar Politics. European History Quarterly. 1990 Jul;20(3):369–99.
654.
Bock G, Thane P. Maternity and gender policies: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s. London: Routledge; 1991.
655.
Braker R. Helene Stocker’s Pacifism in the Weimar Republic: Between Ideal and Reality. Journal of Women’s History. 2001;13(3):70–97.
656.
Braun HJ. The German economy in the twentieth century. London: Routledge; 1990.
657.
Bridenthal R, Stuard SM, Koonz C. Becoming visible: women in European history. 2nd ed. London: Houghton Mifflin; 1987.
658.
Carsten FL. A history of the Prussian Junkers. Aldershot, Hants: Scolar Press; 1989.
659.
C. Edmund Clingan. Breaking the Balance: The Debate over Emergency Unemployment Aid in Weimar Germany, 1925-6. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1994;29(3):371–84. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260765
660.
Clingan CE. More Construction, More Crisis. Journal of Urban History. 2000 Jul;26(5):630–44.
661.
Geoffrey Cocks and Konrad H. Jarausch. German Professions, 1800-1950 [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1990. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=271544
662.
Corni G. Hitler and the peasants: agrarian policy of the Third Reich, 1930-1939. New York: Berg; 1990.
663.
Crew DF. Germans on welfare: from Weimar to Hitler. New York: Oxford University Press; 1998.
664.
Crouthamel J. War Neurosis versus Savings Psychosis: Working-class Politics and Psychological Trauma in Weimar Germany. Journal of Contemporary History. 2002 Apr;37(2):163–82.
665.
Crouthamel Jason. Male Sexuality and Psychological Trauma: Soldiers and Sexual Disorder in World War I and Weimar Germany. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 2007;17(1):60–84.
666.
Dyzenhaus D. Legality and legitimacy: Carl Schmitt, Hans Kelson and Hermann Heller in Weimar. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1997.
667.
Eichengreen B. Golden Fetters [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1996. Available from: http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/0195101138.001.0001/acprof-9780195101133
668.
Christiane Eifert and Pamela E. Selwyn. Coming to Terms with the State: Maternalist Politics and the Development of the Welfare State in Weimar Germany. Central European History [Internet]. 1997;30(1):25–47. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546666
669.
Evans RJ. The feminist movement in Germany, 1894-1933. Vol. v.6. London: Sage Publications; 1976.
670.
Evans RJ, Lee WR. The German family: essays on the social history of the family in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Germany. London: Croom Helm; 1981.
671.
Evans RJ, Geary D, University of East Anglia. Research Seminar Group on German Social History. The German unemployed: experiences and consequences of mass unemployment from the Weimar Republic to the Third Reich. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1987.
672.
Fairchild ES. Women Police in Weimar: Professionalism, Politics, and Innovation in Police Organizations. Law & Society Review. 1987;21(3).
673.
Falter J. The Social Bases of Political Cleavages in the Weimar Republic. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 371–99.
674.
Falter J. Unemployment and the Radicalization of the German Electorate. In: Unemployment and the Great Depression in Weimar Germany. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1986. p. 187–208.
675.
Feldman GD. The Great Disorder: Politics, Economics, and Society in the German Inflation, 1914-1924 [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1997. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=728864
676.
Fischer C. The rise of national socialism and the working classes in Weimar Germany. Providence, R.I: Berghahn Books; 1996.
677.
Fowkes B. Communism in Germany under the Weimar republic. London: Macmillan; 1984.
678.
Frevert U. Women in German history: from bourgeois emancipation to sexual liberation. Oxford: Berg; 1989.
679.
Geary D. The Industrial Elites and the Nazis. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 85–100.
680.
Geary D. The Failure of Labour in the Weimar Republic. In: Towards the Holocaust: the social and economic collapse of the Weimar Republic. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press; 1983. p. 85–100.
681.
Geary D. Working-Class Identities in Europe, 1850s-1930s. Australian Journal of Politics and History. 1999 Mar;45(1):20–34.
682.
Geary D. Beer and Skittles? Workers and Culture in Early Twentieth-Century Germany. Australian Journal of Politics and History. 2000 Sep;46(3):388–402.
683.
Dieter Gessner. Agrarian Protectionism in the Weimar Republic. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1977;12(4):759–78. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260171
684.
Gessner D. The Dilemma of Agriculture During the Weimar Republic. In: Social change and political development in Weimar Germany. London: Croom Helm; 1981. p. 134–54.
685.
Rüdiger Graf. Anticipating the Future in the Present: ‘New Women’ and Other Beings of the Future in Weimar Germany. Central European History [Internet]. 2009;42(4):647–73. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40600975
686.
Reforming Sex : The German Movement for Birth Control and Abortion Reform, 1920-1950 [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1995. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=241568
687.
Guttsman WL. Workers’ culture in Weimar Germany: between tradition and commitment. New York: Berg; 1990.
688.
Guttsman WL. Art for the workers: ideology and the visual arts in Weimar Germany. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1997.
689.
Hagemann K, Schüler-Springorum S. Home/front: the military, war and gender in twentieth-century Germany. Oxford: Berg; 2002.
690.
Hall SF. Youth protection and the prevention of juvenile delinquency. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):353–70.
691.
Harvey E. ’Serving the Volk, Serving the Nation: Women in the Youth Movement and the Public Sphere in Weimar Germany. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 201–22.
692.
Harvey E. Youth and the welfare state in the Weimar Republic. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1993.
693.
Haxthausen CW, Suhr H. Berlin: Culture and Metropolis [Internet]. 1st ed. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; 1987. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=316659
694.
Heyck H. Labour Services in the Weimar Republic and their Ideological Godparents. Journal of Contemporary History. 2003 Apr;38(2):221–36.
695.
Holtfrerich CL. Economic Policy Options at the End of the Weimar Republic. In: Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990. p. 58–91.
696.
Young-Sun Hong. Gender, Citizenship, and the Welfare State: Social Work and the Politics of Femininity in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 1997;30(1):1–24. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546665
697.
James H. The German slump: politics and economics, 1924-1936. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1986.
698.
James H. Economic Reasons for the Collapse of the Weimar Republic. In: Weimar: why did German democracy fail? London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1990. p. 30–57.
699.
Jones LE. Generational Conflict and the Problem of Political Mobilization in the Weimar Republic. In: Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992. p. 347–71.
700.
Jones LE, Retallack JN, German History Society (Great Britain). Elections, mass politics, and social change in modern Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
701.
Killen A. Berlin Electropolis: Shock, Nerves, and German Modernity [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.38. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=239234
702.
Kindleberger CP. A financial history of Western Europe. London: Allen & Unwin; 1984.
703.
Kindleberger CP. The world in depression, 1929-1939. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1987.
704.
Koch HW. The Hitler youth: origins and development, 1922-45. London: Macdonald and Jane’s; 1975.
705.
Ladd B. The ghosts of Berlin: confronting German history in the urban landscape [Internet]. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1997. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=408534
706.
Friedrich Lenger. Towards an Urban Nation. Berg Publishers;
707.
Moeller RG. Peasants and lords in modern Germany: recent studies in agricultural history. Boston, [Mass.]: Allen & Unwin; 1986.
708.
Mommsen H. Class, War or Co-Determination. On the Control of the Economy in the Weimar Republic. In: From Weimar to Auschwitz. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1992. p. 62–78.
709.
Klaus Nathaus. Leisure Clubs and the Decline of the Weimar Republic: A Reassessment. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 2010;45(1):27–50. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40542904
710.
Mary Nolan. Visions of Modernity : American Business and the Modernization of Germany [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1994. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=241630
711.
Osmond J. Rural protest in the Weimar Republic: the free peasantry in the Rhineland and Bavaria. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1993.
712.
OTTO-MORRIS A. "Only united can we escape certain ruin”: Rural Protest at the Close of the Weimar Republic. Rural History. 2009 Oct;20(02).
713.
Patch WL. Christian trade unions in the Weimar Republic, 1918-1933: the failure of ‘corporate pluralism’. Vol. 133. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1985.
714.
Patch WL. Heinrich Brüning and the dissolution of the Weimar Republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998.
715.
Brian Peterson. The Politics of Working-Class Women in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 1977;10(2):87–111. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4545793
716.
Pore R. A conflict of interest: women in German social democracy, 1919-1933. Vol. no. 26. Westport, Conn: Greenwood; 1981.
717.
Katherine Larson Roper. Images of German Youth in Weimar Novels. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1978;13(3):499–516. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260206
718.
Roseman M. Generations in conflict: youth revolt and generation formation in Germany, 1770-1968. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995.
719.
Heidi Sack. ‘Wir werden lächelnd aus dem Leben scheiden’ — Faszination Selbstmord in der Steglitzer Schülertragödie und in Diskursen der Weimarer Zeit. Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung [Internet]. 2009;34(4):259–72. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20762411
720.
Scheck R. Women on the Weimar Right: The Role of Female Politicians in the Deutschnationale Volkspartei (DNVP). Journal of Contemporary History. 2001 Oct;36(4):547–60.
721.
Scheck R. Mothers of the nation: right-wing women in Weimar Germany. Oxford: Berg; 2004.
722.
Shearer JR. Talking about Efficiency: Politics and the Industrial Rationalization Movement in the Weimar Republic. Central European History. 1995 Dec;28(04).
723.
Siemens D. Explaining crime. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):336–52.
724.
Sneeringer J. Winning Women’s Votes: Propaganda and Politics in Weimar Germany [Internet]. 1st ed. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=413427
725.
Stachura PD. Nazi youth in the Weimar Republic. Santa Barbara, Calif: Clio Books; 1975.
726.
Stachura PD. The German Youth movement 1900-1945: an interpretative and documentary history. London: Macmillan; 1981.
727.
Stachura PD. Unemployment and the Great Depression in Weimar Germany. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1986.
728.
Stachura PD. The Weimar Republic and the younger proletariat: an economic and social analysis. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1989.
729.
Stratigakos D. Women’s Berlin: Building the Modern City [Internet]. 1st ed. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; 2008. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=471777
730.
Raymond C. Sun. ‘Hammer Blows’: Work, the Workplace, and the Culture of Masculinity among Catholic Workers in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 2004;37(2):245–71. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4547408
731.
Theweleit K. Male fantasies: 1: Women, floods, bodies, history. Cambridge: Polity Press; 1987.
732.
Theweleit K. Male fantasies: psychoanalyzing the white terror, Vol. 2: Male bodies. Cambridge: Polity; 1988.
733.
Trachtenberg M. Reparation in world politics: France and European economic diplomacy, 1916-1923. New York: Columbia University Press; 1980.
734.
Turner HA. The Ruhrlade, Secret Cabinet of Heavy Industry in the Weimar Republic. Central European History. 1970 Sep;3(03).
735.
Turner HA. German big business and the rise of Hitler. New York: Oxford University Press; 1985.
736.
Usborne C. Cultures of abortion in Weimar Germany [Internet]. Vol. v. 17. Oxford: Berghahn; 2011. Available from: http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=981386
737.
Ward J. Weimar surfaces: urban visual culture in 1920s Germany. 1st ed. Vol. 27. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2001.
738.
Wetzell RF. Psychiatry and criminal justice in modern Germany, 1880—1933. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):270–89.
739.
Widdig B. Culture and Inflation in Weimar Germany [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.26. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2001. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=223736
740.
Wolffram H. Crime, Clairvoyance and the Weimar Police. Journal of Contemporary History. 2009 Oct;44(4):581–601.
741.
Wolfgang Zorn. Student Politics in the Weimar Republic. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1970;5(1):128–43. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/259985
742.
Adamson WL. Avant-garde modernism and Italian Fascism: cultural politics in the era of Mussolini. Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 2001 Jan;6(2):230–48.
743.
Antliff M. Fascism, Modernism, and Modernity. The Art Bulletin. 2002 Mar;84(1).
744.
Adam Arvidsson. Between Fascism and the American Dream: Advertising in Interwar Italy. Social Science History [Internet]. 2001;25(2):151–86. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1171545
745.
Bathrick D. Max Schmeling on the Canvas: Boxing as an Icon of Weimar Culture. New German Critique. 1990 Autumn;(51).
746.
Scheidig W, Beyer KG. Crafts of the Weimar Bauhaus, 1919-1924: an early experiment in industrial design. London: Studio Vista; 1967.
747.
Biddiss MD. The age of the masses: ideas and society in Europe since 1870. Hassocks: Harvester Press; 1977.
748.
Bradbury M, McFarlane JW. Modernism, 1890-1930. London: Penguin; 1991.
749.
Eberle M. World War I and the Weimar artists: Dix, Grosz, Beckmann, Schlemmer. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1985.
750.
Christiane Eisenberg. English sports und deutsche Bürger. Eine Gesellschaftsgeschichte 1800-1939. Schöningh;
751.
Modris Eksteins. The Frankfurter Zeitung: Mirror of Weimar Democracy. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1971;6(4):3–28. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/259684
752.
The rise of national socialism and the working classes in Weimar Germany / edited by Conan Fischer. [Internet]. Available from: https://nusearch.nottingham.ac.uk/primo-explore/search?query=any,contains,Weimar,%20the%20Working%20Class,%20and%20the%20Rise%20of%20Nazism&tab=44notuk_local&search_scope=44NOTUK_LOCAL&vid=44NOTUK&offset=0
753.
Fischer C. The rise of the Nazis. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1995.
754.
Ford A. Klaus Mann and the Weimar Republic: literary tradition and experimentation in his prose, 1924-1933 [Internet]. 1999. Available from: http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11719/
755.
Franciscono M. Walter Gropius and the creation of the Bauhaus in Weimar: the ideals and artistic theories of its founding years. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 1971.
756.
Führer KC. A Medium of Modernity? Broadcasting in Weimar Germany, 1923–1932. The Journal of Modern History. 1997 Dec;69(4):722–53.
757.
Fuhrer KC. German Cultural Life and the Crisis of National Identity during the Depression, 1929-1933. German Studies Review. 2001 Oct;24(3).
758.
Fulda B. Press and politics in the Weimar Republic [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2009. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=728874
759.
Gay P. Weimar culture: the outsider as insider. New York: W.W. Norton; 2001.
760.
Giles GJ. Students and National Socialism in Germany. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1985.
761.
Grenville A. Cockpit of ideologies: the literature and political history of the Weimar Republic. Vol. Bd. 11. Bern: Peter Lang; 1995.
762.
Guerin F. Culture of Light: Cinema and Technology in 1920s Germany [Internet]. 1st ed. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; 2005. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=310696
763.
Guttsman WL. Art for the workers: ideology and the visual arts in Weimar Germany. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1997.
764.
Hall SF. Youth protection and the prevention of juvenile delinquency. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):353–70.
765.
Hamilton GH, Cork R. Painting and sculpture in Europe, 1880-1940. 6th ed. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1993.
766.
Hayman R. Brecht: a biography. New York: Oxford University Press; 1983.
767.
Ronald Hayman. Bertolt Brecht. London: Heinemann; 1984.
768.
Herf J. Reactionary modernism: technology, culture, and politics in Weimar and the Third Reich. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1984.
769.
Jeffrey Herf. The Engineer as Ideologue: Reactionary Modernists in Weimar and Nazi Germany. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1984;19(4):631–48. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260329
770.
Hight EM. Picturing modernism: Moholy-Nagy and photography in Weimar Germany. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press; 1995.
771.
Imhoof D. The Game of Political Change: Sports in Gottingen during the Weimar and Nazi Eras. German History. 2009 Jul 1;27(3):374–94.
772.
Jay M. The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School and the Institute of Social Research, 1923-1950 [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.10. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1996. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=858755
773.
Jennings J. Intellectuals in twentieth-century France: Mandarins and Samurais. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1993.
774.
Kane M. Weimar Germany and the limits of political art: a study of the work of George Grosz and Ernst Toller. Tayport: Hutton Press; 1987.
775.
Kenez P. The birth of the propaganda state: Soviet methods of mass mobilization, 1917-1929. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1985.
776.
Kent Kleinman, Leslie Van Duzer. Mies van der Rohe - The Krefeld Villas. Princeton Architectural Press;
777.
Koch G, Gaines J. Siegfried Kracauer: An Introduction [Internet]. 1st ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=617323
778.
Kracauer S, Levin TY. The mass ornament: Weimar essays. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1995.
779.
Kruger A. ‘Once the Olympics are through, we’ll beat up the Jew’ - German Jewish sport 1898-1938 and the anti-Semitic discourse. Journal of Sport History [Internet]. 1999;Summer:353–75. Available from: http://library.la84.org/SportsLibrary/JSH/JSH1999/JSH2602/jsh2602g.pdf
780.
Laqueur W. Weimar: a cultural history, 1918-1933. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1974.
781.
Lewis BI. George Grosz: art and politics in the Weimar Republic. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1971.
782.
Vernon L. Lidtke. Abstract Art and Left-Wing Politics in the Weimar Republic. Central European History [Internet]. 2004;37(1):49–90. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4547382
783.
John P. McCormick. Fear, Technology, and the State: Carl Schmitt, Leo Strauss, and the Revival of Hobbes in Weimar and National Socialist Germany. Political Theory [Internet]. 1994;22(4):619–52. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/192042
784.
McBride P, McCormick R, Zagar M. Legacies of Modernism: Art and Politics in Northern Europe, 1890-1950 [Internet]. 1st ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan; 2007. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=307942
785.
Murray BA. Film and the German Left in the Weimar Republic: from Caligari to Kuhle Wampe. Austin: University of Texas Press; 1990.
786.
Niewyk DL. The Jews in Weimar Germany. [Manchester]: Manchester University Press; 1980.
787.
Mary Nolan. Visions of Modernity : American Business and the Modernization of Germany [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1994. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=241630
788.
Paenhuysen A. Kurt Tucholsky, John Heartfield and. History of Photography. 2009 Feb;33(1):39–54.
789.
Pfister G, Niewerth T. Jewish women in gymnastics and sport in Germany 1898-1938. Journal of Sport History [Internet]. 1999;Summer:287–325. Available from: http://library.la84.org/SportsLibrary/JSH/JSH1999/JSH2602/jsh2602e.pdf
790.
Phelan A. The Weimar dilemma: intellectuals in the Weimar Republic. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1985.
791.
Phillips A. City of darkness, city of light: émigré filmmakers in Paris, 1929-1939. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press; 2004.
792.
Plummer TG. Film and politics in the Weimar republic. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota; 1982.
793.
Rathenau W, Pogge von Strandmann H. Walther Rathenau, industrialist, banker, intellectual, and politician: notes and diaries, 1907-1922. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 2001.
794.
Rabinbach A. In the shadow of catastrophe: German intellectuals between apocalypse and enlightenment. Vol. 14. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1997.
795.
Gideon Reuveni. Reading Sites as Sights for Reading. The Sale of Newspapers in Germany before 1933: Bookshops in Railway Stations, Kiosks and Street Vendors. Social History [Internet]. 2002;27(3):273–87. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4286907
796.
Katherine Roper. Looking for the German Revolution in Weimar Films. Central European History [Internet]. 1998;31(1):65–90. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546775
797.
Saunders TJ. Hollywood in Berlin: American cinema and Weimar Germany. Vol. 6. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1994.
798.
Schrader B, Schebera J. The golden twenties: art and literature in the Weimar Republic. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1988.
799.
Siemens D. Explaining crime. Journal of European Studies. 2009 Sep;39(3):336–52.
800.
Smail D. White-collar workers, mass culture and Neue Sachlichkeit in Weimar Berlin: a reading of Hans Fallada’s Kleiner Mann, was nun?, Erich Kästner’s Fabian and Irmgard Keun’s Das kunstseidene Mädchen. Vol. Bd. 16. Bern: Peter Lang; 1998.
801.
Stayer JM. Martin Luther, German Saviour: German Evangelical Theological Factions and the Interpretation of Luther, 1917-1933 [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.39. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3331112
802.
Colin Storer. Weimar Germany as Seen by an Englishwoman: British Women Writers and the Weimar Republic. German Studies Review [Internet]. 2009;32(1):129–47. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27668659
803.
Tatar M. Lustmord: sexual murder in Weimar Germany. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press; 1995.
804.
Thompson K. Herr Lubitsch goes to Hollywood: German and American film after World War I. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press; 2005.
805.
Thornhill CJ. Carl Schmitt after the deluge: a review of the recent literature. History of European Ideas. 2000 Oct;26(3–4):225–40.
806.
Saldern A von. Volk and Heimat Culture in Radio Broadcasting during the Period of Transition from Weimar to Nazi Germany. The Journal of Modern History. 2004 Jun;76(2):312–46.
807.
Whaley J. Book Reviews : Culture and Inflation in Weimar Germany. By Bernd Widdig. London: University of California Press, 2001. Pp. xvi + 278. £45. Weimar Surfaces. Urban Visual Culture in 1920s Germany. By Janet Ward. London: University of California Press, 2001. Pp. xvi + 358. £19.95 (pbk). Journal of European Studies. 2002 Dec;32(127):421–3.
808.
Willett J. Art and politics in the Weimar period: the new sobriety, 1917-1933. 1st Da Capo Press ed. New York: Da Capo Press; 1996.
809.
Wingler HM, Stein J. The Bauhaus: Weimar, Dessau, Berlin, Chicago. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press; 1969.
810.
Woods R. The conservative revolution in the Weimar Republic. Basingstoke: MacMillan; 1996.
811.
Wright JRC. ‘Above parties’: the political attitudes of the German protestant church leadership 1918-1933. London: Oxford University Press; 1974.
812.
Adamson WL. Avant-garde modernism and Italian Fascism: cultural politics in the era of Mussolini. Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 2001 Jan;6(2):230–48.
813.
Ben-Ghiat R, Ben-Ghiat R. Fascist Modernities: Italy, 1922-1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.42. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2001. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=224414
814.
Blinkhorn M. Fascists and Conservatives: The Radical Right and the Establishment in Twentieth-Century Europe [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1990. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=179005
815.
Mason TW, Caplan J. Nazism, fascism and the working class [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511622328
816.
CAPOCCIA G. Defending democracy: Reactions to political extremism in inter-war Europe. European Journal of Political Research. 2001 Jun;39(4):431–60.
817.
Carsten FL. Fascist movements in Austria: from Schönerer to Hitler. Vol. v. 7. London: Sage Publications; 1977.
818.
Childers T. The Nazi voter: the social foundations of fascism in Germany, 1919-1933. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1983.
819.
Childers T. The Formation of the Nazi Constituency 1919-1933. London: Croom Helm; 1986.
820.
Corni G. Hitler and the peasants: agrarian policy of the Third Reich, 1930-1939. New York: Berg; 1990.
821.
De Grand AJ. Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany: the ‘fascist’ style of rule. London: Routledge; 1995.
822.
De Grand AJ. Italian fascism: its origins & development. 3rd ed. Lincoln, Neb: University of Nebraska Press; 2000.
823.
Falter J. Radicalization of the middleclasses or mobilization of the un-political? The theories of S. Lipset and R. Bendix on the electoral support of the NSDAP in the light of recent research. Social science information: information sur les sciences sociales. 1981;389–429.
824.
Falter J. Unemployment and the Radicalization of the German Electorate. In: Unemployment and the Great Depression in Weimar Germany. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1986. p. 187–208.
825.
Fischer C. The German communists and the rise of Nazism. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1990.
826.
Fischer C. The rise of national socialism and the working classes in Weimar Germany. Providence, R.I: Berghahn Books; 1996.
827.
Fowkes B. Communism in Germany under the Weimar republic. London: Macmillan; 1984.
828.
Geary D. The Industrial Elites and the Nazis. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 85–100.
829.
Geary D. Hitler and Nazism. 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 2000.
830.
Geary D. Nazis and Workers before 1933. Australian Journal of Politics and History. 2002 Mar;48(1):40–51.
831.
Geyer M. Etudes in Political History. Reichwehr, NSDAP, and the Seizure of Power. In: The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983. p. 101–23.
832.
Giles GJ. Students and National Socialism in Germany. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1985.
833.
The Early Goebbels Diaries: the Journals of Joseph Goebbels from 1923-1926 [Internet]. Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 1962. Available from: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Early-Goebbels-Diaries-Journals-1923-1926/dp/B0019Y042K/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1523611376&sr=8-1&keywords=The+early+Goebbels+diaries+%3A+the+journals+of+Joseph+Goebbels+from+1923-1926
834.
Griffin R. The nature of fascism. London: Routledge; 1993.
835.
Griffin R. Fascism. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1995.
836.
Griffin R. International fascism: theories, causes and the new consensus. London: Arnold; 1998.
837.
Larsen SU, Hagtvet B, Myklebust JP. Who were the fascists: social roots of European fascism. Bergen: Universitetsforlaget; 1980.
838.
Hamilton RF. Who voted for Hitler? Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1982.
839.
Herb GH. Under the Map of Germany: Nationalism and Propaganda 1918 - 1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1996. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=170371
840.
Ioanid R. The sword of the archangel: fascist ideology in Romania. Vol. no. 292. Boulder [Colo.]: East European Monographs; 1990.
841.
Kallis A. Fascist Ideology: Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany, 1922-1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=165696
842.
Karvonen L. From white to blue-and-black: Finnish fascism in the inter-war era. Vol. 36. Helsinki: Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters; 1988.
843.
Kershaw I. Hitler: 1889-1936: hubris. London: Allen Lane; 1998.
844.
Laqueur W. Fascism: a reader’s guide : analyses, interpretations, bibliography. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin; 1979.
845.
Laqueur W. Fascism: past, present, future. New York: Oxford University Press; 1996.
846.
Mommsen H. Social Democracy on the Defensive. The Immobility of the SPD and the Rise of National Socialism. In: From Weimar to Auschwitz. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1992.
847.
Mosse GL. International fascism: new thoughts and new approaches. Vol. v. 3. London: Sage Publications; 1979.
848.
Mosse GL. The fascist revolution: toward a general theory of fascism. New York: H. Fertig; 1999.
849.
Orlow D. The history of the Nazi Party. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press; 1969.
850.
Payne SG. Fascism in Spain, 1923-1977 [Internet]. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1999. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3445187
851.
A history of fascism, 1914-1945 [electronic resource] / Stanley G. Payne. [Internet]. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; Available from: https://nusearch.nottingham.ac.uk/primo-explore/fulldisplay?docid=44NOTUK_ACAD_COMPEBC3445236&context=L&vid=44NOTUK&lang=en_US&search_scope=44NOTUK_LOCAL&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&isFrbr=true&tab=44notuk_local&query=any,contains,A%20history%20of%20fascism,%201914-1945&sortby=date&facet=frbrgroupid,include,1092859586&offset=0
852.
Scheuerman WE. The rule of law under siege: selected essays of Franz L. Neumann and Otto Kirchheimer. Vol. 9. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1996.
853.
Soucy R. French fascism: the first wave, 1924-1933. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1986.
854.
Stachura PD. Nazi youth in the Weimar Republic. Santa Barbara, Calif: Clio Books; 1975.
855.
Stachura PD. The Nazi Machtergreifung. London: Allen & Unwin; 1983.
856.
Sternhell Z. Neither right nor left: fascist ideology in France. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1986.
857.
Turner HA. German big business and the rise of Hitler. New York: Oxford University Press; 1985.
858.
Turner HA. Hitler’s thirty days to power: January 1933. Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley; 1996.
859.
Weitz ED. Creating German communism, 1890-1990: from popular protests to socialist state. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1997.
860.
Welch D. Nazi propaganda: the power and the limitations. London: Croom Helm; 1983.
861.
Woolf SJ. Fascism in Europe. London: Methuen; 1981.
862.
Bahr E. Weimar on the Pacific: German exile culture in Los Angeles and the crisis of modernism. 1st ed. Vol. 41. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2007.
863.
Claussen D, Livingstone R. Theodor W. Adorno: One Last Genius [Internet]. 1st ed. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 2008. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3300037
864.
Andreas Dorpalen. Weimar Republic and Nazi Era in East German Perspective. Central European History [Internet]. 1978;11(3):211–30. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4545834
865.
Koch G, Gaines J. Siegfried Kracauer: An Introduction [Internet]. 1st ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2000. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=617323
866.
Payne SG, Sorkin DJ, Tortorice JS, Laqueur W. What History Tells: George L. Mosse and the Culture of Modern Europe [Internet]. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3444745
867.
WILLIAM E. SCHEUERMAN. Realism and the Left: the case of Hans J. Morgenthau. Review of International Studies [Internet]. 2008;34(1):29–51. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41307938
868.
Wager JB. Dames in the Driver’s Seat: Rereading Film Noir [Internet]. 1st ed. Austin: University of Texas Press; 2005. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3443302
869.
Andrews EM. * The writing on the wall: the British Commonwealth and aggression in the East 1931-1935. Sydney: Allen & Unwin; 1987.
870.
Max Beloff. * Imperial Sunset. Palgrave Macmillan;
871.
Clayton A. * The British Empire as a superpower, 1919-39. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1986.
872.
Keith Jeffery. * The British army and the crisis of empire, 1918-22. Manchester, England: Manchester University Press; 1984.
873.
Low DA. * Congress and the Raj: facets of the Indian struggle, 1917-47. 2nd ed. New Delhi: Oxford University Press; 2006.
874.
Tomlinson BR. * The political economy of the Raj, 1914-1947: the economics of decolonization in India. London: Macmillan Press; 1979.
875.
Brown J. India. In: The Oxford history of the British Empire Vol IV: The Twentieth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1998.
876.
Brown JM. Modern India: the origins of an Asian democracy. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1994.
877.
Butler LJ. Britain and Empire: adjusting to a post-imperial world. London: I.B. Tauris; 2002.
878.
Cain PJ, Hopkins AG. British imperialism: crisis and deconstruction, 1914-1990. London: Longman; 1993.
879.
Douglas R. Liquidation of empire: the decline of the British Empire. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2002.
880.
Gallagher J, Seal A. The decline, revival and fall of the British Empire: the Ford lectures and other essays. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1982.
881.
Holland RF. Britain and the Commonwealth alliance, 1918-1939. London: Macmillan; 1981.
882.
Holland RF. European decolonization, 1918-1981: an introductory survey. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1985.
883.
Darwin J. A Third British Empire?: The Dominion Idea in Imperial Politics. In: The Oxford history of the British Empire Vol IV: The Twentieth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1998.
884.
Mahajan S. Independence and partition: the erosion of colonial power in India. Vol. 1. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications; 1999.
885.
Mockaitis TR. British counterinsurgency, 1919-60. Basingstoke: Macmillan, in association with King’s College, London; 1990.
886.
Moore RJ. The crisis of Indian unity, 1917-1940. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1974.
887.
Ovendale R. ‘Appeasement’ and the English speaking world: Britain, the United States, the dominions, and the policy of `appeasement’ 1937-1939. Cardiff: University of Wales Press; 1975.
888.
Porter B. The lion’s share: a short history of British imperialism, 1850-1995. 3rd ed. London: Longman; 1996.
889.
Robinson K. The dilemmas of trusteeship: aspects of British colonial policy between the wars : the Reid lectures delivered at Acadia University in February 1963. London: Oxford University Press; 1965.
890.
Sarkar S. Modern India 1885-1947. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1989.
891.
Ball S. Baldwin and the Conservative Party: the crisis of 1929-1931. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1988.
892.
Benewick R. The Fascist movement in Britain. Rev. ed. London: Allen Lane; 1972.
893.
Clarke PF. Hope and glory: Britain, 1900-2000. 2nd ed. Vol. 9. London: Penguin; 2004.
894.
Stevenson J, Cook C. Britain in the Depression: society and politics, 1929-1939. 2nd ed. London: Longman; 1994.
895.
Cronin M. The failure of British fascism: the far right and the fight for political recognition. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1996.
896.
Garside WR. British unemployment, 1919-1939: a study in public policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990.
897.
Glynn S, Oxborrow J. Interwar Britain: a social and economic history. London: Allen and Unwin; 1976.
898.
Harrison BH. The transformation of British politics, 1860-1995. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1996.
899.
Howell D. MacDonald’s party: Labour identities and crisis, 1922-1931. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2002.
900.
Jarvis D. The Shaping of Conservative Electoral Hegemony, 1918–1939. In: Party, state and society: electoral behaviour in Britain since 1820. Aldershot: Scolar Press; 1997.
901.
Kinnear M. The British voter: an atlas and survey since 1885. London: Batsford; 1968.
902.
Lewis DS. Illusions of grandeur: Mosley, fascism and British society, 1931-81. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1987.
903.
Linehan TP. British fascism, 1918-39: parties, ideology and culture. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 2000.
904.
McKibbin R. Class and Conventional Wisdom: the Conservative Party and the "Public” in inter-war Britain. In: The ideologies of class: social relations in Britain, 1880-1950. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1990.
905.
McKibbin R. Class and conventional wisdom. In: The ideologies of class: social relations in Britain, 1880-1950. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1990.
906.
McKibbin R. The economic policy of the Second Labour Government, 1929–1931. In: The ideologies of class: social relations in Britain, 1880-1950. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1990.
907.
McKibbin R. Classes and cultures: England, 1918-1951. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1998.
908.
Pimlott B. Labour and the Left in the 1930s. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1977.
909.
Pugh M. The making of modern British politics, 1867-1945. 3rd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers; 2002.
910.
Riddell N. Labour in crisis: the second Labour government, 1929-1931. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1999.
911.
Smart N. The national government, 1931-40. Basingstoke: Macmillan Press; 1999.
912.
Thurlow RC. Fascism in Britain: a history, 1918-1998 [Internet]. London: I.B.Tauris; 1998. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=677100
913.
Williamson P. National crisis and national government: British politics, the economy and Empire, 1926-1932. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
914.
Rothschild J. * East Central Europe between the two World Wars. Vol. v. 9. Seattle, Wash: University of Washington Press; 1974.
915.
Seton-Watson H. * Eastern Europe between the wars 1918-1941. 3rd ed., rev. New York: Harper & Row; 1967.
916.
Banac I. The national question in Yugoslavia: origins, history, politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 1984.
917.
Davies N. God’s playground: a history of Poland. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1981.
918.
Davies N. God’s playground: a history of Poland. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1981.
919.
Djokić D. Yugoslavism: histories of a failed idea, 1918-1992. London: Hurst & Company; 2003.
920.
Hoptner JB. Yugoslavia in crisis, 1934-1941. New York: Columbia University Press; 1962.
921.
Mamatey VS, Luža R. A history of the Czechoslovak Republic, 1918-1948. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1973.
922.
Molnár M. A concise history of Hungary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2001.
923.
Sugar PF, University of Washington. Graduate School. Native fascism in the successor states, 1918-1945. Vol. no. 4. Santa Barbara, Calif: ABC-Clio; 1971.
924.
Ioanid R. The sword of the archangel: fascist ideology in Romania. Vol. no. 292. Boulder [Colo.]: East European Monographs; 1990.
925.
Adamthwaite AP. * Grandeur and misery: France’s bid for power in Europe, 1914-1940. London: Arnold; 1995.
926.
Agulhon M. The French Republic, 1879-1992. Oxford: B. Blackwell; 1993.
927.
Bernard P, Dubief H. The decline of the Third Republic, 1914-1938. Vol. 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1985.
928.
Fridenson P. The French home front, 1914-1918. English ed. Providence, R.I.: Berg; 1992.
929.
Jackson J. The politics of depression in France, 1932-1936. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1985.
930.
Kriegel A. The French Communists: profile of a people. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1972.
931.
McMillan JF. Twentieth-century France: politics and society 1898-1991. London: Edward Arnold; 1992.
932.
Mortimer E. The rise of the French Communist Party, 1920-1947. London: Faber and Faber; 1984.
933.
Prost A. In the wake of war: les anciens combattants and French society. Providence: Berg; 1992.
934.
Soucy R. French fascism: the first wave, 1924-1933. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1986.
935.
Tint H. France since 1918. 2nd ed. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1980.
936.
Winter JM. Sites of memory, sites of mourning: the Great War in European cultural history. Vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995.
937.
Agulhon M. The French Republic, 1879-1992. Oxford: B. Blackwell; 1993.
938.
Alexander MS, Graham H. The French and Spanish popular fronts: comparative perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1989.
939.
Alexander MS. The republic in danger: General Maurice Gamelin and the politics of French defence, 1933-1940. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
940.
Bloch M, Hopkins G. Strange defeat: a statement of evidence written in 1940. London: Oxford University Press; 1949.
941.
Brower DR. The new Jacobins: the French Communist Party and the Popular Front. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press; 1968.
942.
Graham BD. Choice and democratic order: the French Socialist Party, 1937-1950. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1993.
943.
Greene N. Crisis and decline: the French Socialist Party in the Popular Front era. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press; 1969.
944.
Horne A. To lose a battle: France, 1940. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books; 1979.
945.
Jackson J. The Popular Front in France: defending democracy, 1934-38. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1988.
946.
Lacouture J. Léon Blum. Paris: Seuil; 1977.
947.
Larkin M. France since the Popular Front: government and people 1936-1986. Oxford: Clarendon; 1988.
948.
Larmour PJ. The French Radical Party in the 1930’s. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press; 1964.
949.
McMillan JF. Twentieth-century France: politics and society 1898-1991. London: Edward Arnold; 1992.
950.
Soucy R. French fascism: the second wave, 1933-1939. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1995.
951.
Vinen R. France, 1934-1970. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1996.
952.
Vinen R. The politics of French business 1936-1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991.
953.
Weber E. The hollow years: France in the 1930’s. New York: W.W. Norton; 1996.
954.
Young RJ. In command of France: French foreign policy and military planning, 1933-1940. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1978.
955.
Davies P. The Extreme Right in France, 1789 to the Present: From de Maistre to le Pen [Internet]. 1st ed. Milton: Taylor & Francis Group; 2002. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=169943
956.
Paxton RO. Vichy France: old guard and new order, 1940-1944. New York: Columbia University Press; 2001.
957.
Paxton RO. French Peasant Fascism: Henry Dorgères’ Greenshirts and the Crises of French Agriculture, 1929-1939 [Internet]. Cary: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 1997. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=271504
958.
Passmore K. From liberalism to fascism: the right in a French province, 1928-1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1997.
959.
Soucy R. French fascism: the first wave, 1924-1933. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1986.
960.
Soucy R. French fascism: the second wave, 1933-1939. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1995.
961.
Sternhell Z. Neither right nor left: fascist ideology in France. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1986.
962.
De Grand AJ. * Italian fascism: its origins & development. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press; 1982.
963.
Lyttelton A. * Liberal and fascist Italy, 1900-1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2002.
964.
Whittam J. * Fascist Italy. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1995.
965.
Blinkhorn M. Mussolini and fascist Italy [Internet]. 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 1994. Available from: http://www.NOTTINGHAM.eblib.com/EBLWeb/patron/?target=patron&extendedid=E_398534_0
966.
Bosworth RJB. The Italian dictatorship: problems and perspectives in the interpretation of Mussolini and fascism. London: Arnold; 1998.
967.
Bosworth RJB. Mussolini [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc; 2003. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1630355
968.
Cardoza AL. Agrarian elites and Italian fascism: the province of Bologna 1901-1926. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1982.
969.
De Grand AJ. The Italian Nationalist Association and the rise of fascism in Italy. Lincoln, Neb: University of Nebraska Press; 1978.
970.
De Grazia V. How fascism ruled women: Italy, 1922-1945. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1992.
971.
De Grazia V. The culture of consent: mass organization of leisure in fascist Italy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1981.
972.
Deakin FW. The brutal friendship: Mussolini, Hitler and the fall of Italian Fascism. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1962.
973.
Forgacs D. Rethinking Italian fascism: capitalism, populism and culture. London: Lawrence and Wishart; 1986.
974.
Emilio Gentile. Fascism as Political Religion. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1990;25(2):229–51. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260731
975.
Gillette A. Racial Theories in Fascist Italy [Internet]. 1st ed. Abingdon, Oxon: Taylor & Francis Group; 2001. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=170926
976.
Adler FH. Italian industrialists from liberalism to fascism: the political development of the industrial bourgeoisie, 1906-34. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2002.
977.
Joll J. Three intellectuals in politics. New York: Pantheon Books; 1960.
978.
Koon TH. Believe, obey, fight: political socialization of youth in fascist Italy, 1922-1943. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1985.
979.
Mack Smith D. Italy and its monarchy. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press; 1989.
980.
Mack Smith D. Mussolini. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; 1981.
981.
Morgan P. Italian fascism, 1915-1945 [Internet]. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=296471
982.
Pollard JF. The Vatican and Italian fascism, 1929-32: a study in conflict. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2005.
983.
Roberts DD. The syndicalist tradition and Italian Fascism. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1979.
984.
Gaetano Salvemini. The origins of fascism in Italy. New York: Harper & Row; 1973.
985.
Salvemini G. Under the axe of fascism. Left Book Club ed. London: Victor Gollancz; 1936.
986.
Sarti R. The ax within: Italian fascism in action. New York: New Viewpoints; 1974.
987.
Sarti R. Fascism and the industrial leadership in Italy, 1919-1940: a study in the expansion of private power under Fascism. Berkeley [Calif.]: University of California Press; 1971.
988.
Tannenbaum ER. Fascism in Italy: society and culture, 1922-1945. London: Allen Lane; 1973.
989.
Whittam J. Fascist Italy. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1995.
990.
Perry Willson. Gender, Family and Sexuality : The Private Sphere in Italy, 1860-1945 [Internet]. Palgrave Macmillan Limited; 2004. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=736232
991.
Acton E. Rethinking the Russian Revolution. London: Edward Arnold; 1990.
992.
Figes O. A people’s tragedy: the Russian Revolution, 1891-1924. London: Pimlico; 1997.
993.
Figes O. Peasant Russia, civil war: the Volga countryside in revolution (1917-1921). London: Phoenix; 2001.
994.
Fitzpatrick S. The Russian Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1982.
995.
Frankel ER, Frankel J, Knei-Paz B. Revolution in Russia: reassessments of 1917. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
996.
Geyer D. The Russian Revolution. Leamington Spa: Berg; 1987.
997.
Harding N. Lenin’s political thought Vol 2. London: Macmillan; 1977.
998.
Kaiser DH. The workers’ revolution in Russia, 1917: the view from below. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1987.
999.
Service R. Lenin: a political life, Volume 2: Worlds in collision. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 1991.
1000.
Rosenberg WG. Liberals in the Russian Revolution: the Constitutional Democratic Party, 1917-1921. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press; 1974.
1001.
Service R. Society and politics in the Russian Revolution. Basingstoke: Macmillan P.; 1992.
1002.
Ulam AB. The Bolsheviks: The Intellectual and Political History of the Triumph of Communism in Russia, with a New Preface by the Author [Internet]. 1st ed. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 1998. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3300708
1003.
Getty JA, Naumov OV. The road to terror: Stalin and the self-destruction of the Bolsheviks, 1932-1939. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press; 1999.
1004.
Brovkin VN. Behind the front lines of the civil war: political parties and social movements in Russia, 1918-1922. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press; 1994.
1005.
Chase WJ. Workers, society, and the Soviet state: labor and life in Moscow, 1918-1929. Illini Books ed. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 1990.
1006.
Daniels RV. The conscience of the Revolution: communist opposition in Soviet Russia. Vol. 40. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1960.
1007.
Davies S. Popular opinion in Stalin’s Russia: terror, propaganda and dissent, 1934-1941. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1997.
1008.
Deutscher I. The prophet armed: Trotsky, 1879-1921. Vol. 227. London: Oxford University Press; 1970.
1009.
Fitzpatrick S, Rabinowitch A, Stites R. Russia in the era of NEP: explorations in Soviet society and culture. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 1991.
1010.
Harding N. Lenin’s political thought Vol 2. London: Macmillan; 1977.
1011.
Kemp-Welch A, editor. The Ideas of Nikolai Bukharin [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 1992. Available from: http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198278665.001.0001/acprof-9780198278665
1012.
Koenker D, Rosenberg WG, Suny RG. Party, state, and society in the Russian Civil War: explorations in social history. Bloomington, Ind: Indiana University Press; 1989.
1013.
Lynch MJ. Stalin and Khrushchev: the USSR, 1924-64. London: Hodder & Stoughton; 1990.
1014.
Malle S. The economic organization of war communism, 1918-1921. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1985.
1015.
Mawdsley E. The Stalin years: the Soviet Union, 1929-1953. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1998.
1016.
Nove A. An economic history of the USSR, 1917-1991. 3rd ed. London: Penguin Books; 1992.
1017.
Service R. Lenin: a political life Vol 3. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1985.
1018.
Service R. The Bolshevik party in revolution: a study in organisational change, 1917-1923. London: Macmillan; 1979.
1019.
Shearer DR. Industry, state, and society in Stalin’s Russia, 1926-1934. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press; 1996.
1020.
Siegelbaum LH. Soviet state and society between revolutions, 1918-1929. Vol. 8. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1992.
1021.
Ward C. Stalin’s Russia. 2nd ed. London: Arnold; 1999.
1022.
Ben-Ami S. Fascism from above: the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera in Spain, 1923-1930. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1983.
1023.
Ben-Ami S. The origins of the Second Republic in Spain. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1978.
1024.
Blinkhorn M. Spain in conflict 1931-1939: democracy and its enemies. London: Sage; 1986.
1025.
Boyd CP. Praetorian politics in liberal Spain. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1979.
1026.
Buchanan T. Britain and the Spanish Civil War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1997.
1027.
Carr R. Images of the Spanish Civil War. London: Allen & Unwin; 1986.
1028.
Cattell DT. Soviet diplomacy and the Spanish Civil War. Vol. v. 5. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1957.
1029.
Edwards J. The British government and the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. London: Macmillan; 1979.
1030.
Ellwood SM. The Spanish Civil War. Oxford: Basil Blackwell; 1991.
1031.
Esenwein GR, Shubert A. Spain at war: the Spanish Civil War in context, 1931-1939. London: Longman; 1995.
1032.
Graham H, Preston P. The Popular Front in Europe. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1987.
1033.
Graham H. Socialism and war: the Spanish Socialist Party in power and crisis, 1936-1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991.
1034.
Harrison J. An economic history of modern Spain. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 1978.
1035.
Jackson G. Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931-1939 [Internet]. 1st ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1965. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=919502
1036.
Payne SG. Fascism in Spain, 1923-1977 [Internet]. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1999. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3445187
1037.
Payne SG. The Franco Regime, 1936-1975 [Internet]. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1987. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3445222
1038.
Payne SG. The Spanish Revolution. 1st ed. New York: W.W. Norton; 1970.
1039.
Pinto AC. Salazar’s dictatorship and European fascism: problems of interpretation. Boulder: Social Science Monographs; 1995.
1040.
Preston P. Revolution and war in Spain, 1931-1939 [Internet]. London: Routledge; 1993. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=169147
1041.
Preston P, Mackenzie AL. The Republic besieged: Civil War in Spain 1936-1939. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press; 1996.
1042.
Preston P. A concise history of the Spanish Civil War. London: Fontana; 1996.
1043.
Preston P. The coming of the Spanish Civil War: reform, reaction and revolution in the Second Republic, 1931-1936. London: Macmillan; 1978.
1044.
Shubert A. A Social History of Modern Spain [Internet]. 1st ed. London: Taylor & Francis Group; 1990. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=179396
1045.
Thomas H. The Spanish Civil War. 3rd ed., revised and enlarged. London: Hamilton; 1977.
1046.
Carsten FL. Fascist movements in Austria: from Schönerer to Hitler. Vol. v. 7. London: Sage Publications; 1977.
1047.
Lewis J. Fascism and the working class in Austria, 1918-1934: the failure of labour in the First Republic. New York: Berg; 1991.
1048.
Pauley BF. Hitler and the forgotten Nazis: a history of Austrian National Socialism. London: Macmillan; 1981.
1049.
Pauley BF. From prejudice to persecution: a history of Austrian anti-semitism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1992.
1050.
Badger AJ. The New Deal: the depression years, 1933-1940. New York: Hill and Wang; 1989.
1051.
Bernstein MA. The Great Depression: delayed recovery and economic change in America, 1929-1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1997.
1052.
Brinkley A. Prosperity, Depression and War, 1920 - 1945. In: The new American history. Rev. and expanded ed. Philadelphia: Temple University Press; 1997.
1053.
Brunner K, University of Rochester. Center for Research in Government Policy and Business. The Great Depression revisited. Vol. v. 2. Boston [Mass.]: Martinus Nijhoff; 1981.
1054.
Burner D. The politics of provincialism: the Democratic Party in transition, 1918-1932. New York: Knopf; 1968.
1055.
Chafe WH. The American woman: her changing social, economic, and political roles, 1920-1970. London: Oxford University Press; 1974.
1056.
Coben S. Rebellion against Victorianism: the impetus for cultural change in 1920s America. New York: Oxford University Press; 1991.
1057.
Cohen L. Making a new deal: industrial workers in Chicago, 1919-1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990.
1058.
Craig DB. After Wilson: the struggle for the Democratic Party, 1920-1934. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1992.
1059.
Davis KS. FDR, the New Deal years, 1933-1937: a history. New York: Random House; 1986.
1060.
Dawley A. Struggles for justice: social responsibility and the liberal state. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press; 1991.
1061.
Fausold ML, Mazuzan GT. The Hoover presidency: a reappraisal. Albany: State University of New York Press; 1974.
1062.
Fausold ML. The presidency of Herbert C. Hoover. Lawrence, Kan: University Press of Kansas; 1985.
1063.
Fraser S, Gerstle G. The rise and fall of the New Deal Order, 1930-1980. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1989.
1064.
Gordon C. New deals: business, labor, and politics in America, 1920-1935. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
1065.
Hawley EW. The Great War and the search for a modern order: a history of the American people and their institutions, 1917-1933. New York: St. Martin’s Press; 1979.
1066.
Hicks JD. Republican ascendancy, 1921-1933. London: Hamish Hamilton; 1960.
1067.
Huggins NI. Harlem renaissance. New York: Oxford University Press; 1971.
1068.
Jackson KT. The Ku Klux Klan in the city, 1915-1930. New York: Oxford University Press; 1967.
1069.
Kennedy DM. Over here: the First World War and American society. New York: Oxford University Press; 1980.
1070.
Leuchtenburg WE. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940. Vol. TB 3025. New York: Harper & Row; 1963.
1071.
Marsden, Marsden GM. Fundamentalism and American Culture [Internet]. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated; 2006. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=271523
1072.
Montgomery D. The fall of the house of labor: the workplace, the state and American labor activism, 1865-1925. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1987.
1073.
Noggle B. Into the twenties: the United States from Armistice to normalcy. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 1974.
1074.
Patterson JT. The New Deal and the States: federalism in transition. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press; 2015.
1075.
Patterson JT. America in the twentieth century: a history. 5th ed. Fort Worth: Harcourt College Publishers; 2000.
1076.
Sitkoff H. Fifty years later: the New Deal evaluated. Philadelphia: Temple University Press; 1985.
1077.
Timberlake JH. Prohibition and the progressive movement, 1900-1920. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1963.
1078.
Hoff J, Handlin O. Herbert Hoover: forgotten progressive. Boston: Little, Brown; 1975.
1079.
Ajayi JFA, Crowder M. History of West Africa: Volume 2. 2nd ed. Harlow: Longman; 1987.
1080.
Freund B. The making of contemporary Africa: the development of African society since 1800. 3rd ed. London: Palgrave Macmillan; 2016.
1081.
Hopkins AG. An economic history of West Africa. New York: Columbia University Press; 1973.
1082.
Iliffe J. Africans: the history of a continent. Vol. 85. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995.
1083.
Oliver RA, Atmore A. Africa since 1800. 5th ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2005.
1084.
Hobsbawm E, Ranger T. The invention of tradition in colonial Africa. In: The Invention of Tradition [Internet]. New York: Cambridge University Press; 2012. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1864711
1085.
Kirk-Greene AHM, Ranger TO, Vaughan O. The Invention of tradition revisited. In: Legitimacy and the state in twentieth-century Africa: essays in honour of AHM Kirk-Greene. Basingstoke: Macmillan, in association with St. Antony’s College, Oxford; 1993.
1086.
Albert B, Henderson P. South America and the First World War: the impact of the war on Brazil, Argentina, Peru and Chile. Vol. 65. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2002.
1087.
Bergquist CW. Labor in Latin America: comparative essays on Chile, Argentina, Venezuela, and Colombia. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press; 1986.
1088.
Bethell L. Mexico since independence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991.
1089.
Bethell L. The Cambridge history of Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1984.
1090.
Bulmer-Thomas V. The economic history of Latin America since independence. 3rd ed. Vol. 98. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2014.
1091.
Domínguez JI. Cuba: order and revolution. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press; 1978.
1092.
Hamilton N. The limits of state autonomy: post-revolutionary Mexico. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1982.
1093.
Rock D. Argentina, 1516-1987: from Spanish colonization to Alfonsín. Rev. and expanded ed. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1987.
1094.
Dreyer EL. China at war, 1901-1949. London: Longman; 1995.
1095.
Gray J. Rebellions and revolutions: China from the 1800s to the 1980s. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1990.
1096.
Johnson CA. Peasant nationalism and communist power: the emergence of revolutionary China, 1937-1945. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press; 1962.
1097.
Mackerras C. China in transformation 1900-1949. London: Longman; 1998.
1098.
Schwarcz V. The Chinese enlightenment: intellectuals and the legacy of the May Fourth movement of 1919. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1986.
1099.
Selden M. China in revolution: the Yenan way revisited. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe; 1995.
1100.
Sheridan JE. China in disintegration: the Republican era in Chinese history, 1912-1949. New York: Free Press; 1975.
1101.
Cheng P kai, Lestz ME, Spence JD. The search for modern China: a documentary collection. New York: W.W. Norton; 1999.
1102.
Wakeman FE, Edmonds RL. Reappraising Republican China. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2000.
1103.
Lu DJ. * Chapter XIV - Doc. 8 Basic Outline for Implementing the Imperial Rule Assistance Association 1940 from:  Japan: a documentary history, Vol 2. In: * Japan: a documentary history. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe; 1997.
1104.
Lu DJ. * Chapter XIV - Doc. 1 Kita Ikki ‘General Outline of Measures for the Reconstruction of Japan’ 1923 from:  Japan: a documentary history, Vol 2. In: * Japan: a documentary history. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe; 1997.
1105.
Beasley WG. * Chapters 11 -12. In: The rise of modern Japan. 2nd ed. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 1995. p. 176–212.
1106.
Dower JW. * Part III ‘The war in Japanese eyes’, from: War without mercy: race and power in the Pacific war. In: *War without mercy: race and power in the Pacific war. 7th printing, corr. by the author. New York: Pantheon Books; 1993.
1107.
Dower JW. * Japan in war and peace: essays on history, culture and race. London: Fontana; 1996.
1108.
Duus P, Okimoto DI. Comment: Fascism and the History of Pre-War Japan: The Failure of a Concept. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1979 Nov;39(1).
1109.
Duus P, Okimoto DI. Fascism and the History of Pre-War Japan: The Failure of a Concept, Vol 1. In: Shōwa Japan: political, economic and social history, 1926-1989. London: Routledge; 1998.
1110.
Fletcher M. Intellectuals and Fascism in Early Showa Japan, Vol 1. In: Shōwa Japan: political, economic and social history, 1926-1989. London: Routledge; 1998.
1111.
Hilary Conroy. Concerning Japanese Fascism. The Journal of Asian Studies [Internet]. 1981;40(2):327–8. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2054867
1112.
Iriye A. Power and Culture: The Japanese-American War, 1941-1945 [Internet]. 1st ed. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 1981. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3300747
1113.
Iriye A. Japan’s Drive to Great Power Status. In: The Cambridge History of Japan: The Nineteenth Century, Vol 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1989. p. 721–82.
1114.
Gregory J. Kasza. Fascism from below? A Comparative Perspective on the Japanese Right, 1931-1936. Journal of Contemporary History [Internet]. 1984;19(4):607–29. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/260328
1115.
Large SS. Emperor Hirohito and Shōwa Japan: a political biography [Internet]. London: Routledge; 1992. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=178498
1116.
Maruyama M, Morris II. Chapter 1 - Theory and Psychology of Ultranationalism. In: Thought and behaviour in modern Japanese politics. London: Oxford University Press; 1963. p. 1–24.
1117.
Maruyama M, Morris II. Chapter 3 - Thought and Behaviour Patterns of Japan’s Wartime Leaders. In: Thought and behaviour in modern Japanese politics. London: Oxford University Press; 1963. p. 84–134.
1118.
Maruyama M, Morris II. Chapter 4 - Nationalism in Japan: Its Theoretical Background & Prospects. In: Thought and behaviour in modern Japanese politics. London: Oxford University Press; 1963.
1119.
Michelson MC. Fogbound in Tokyo: Domestic Politics in Japan’s Foreign Policy Making, from: Japan Examined. In: Japan examined: perspectives on modern Japanese history. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press; 1983.
1120.
Myers RH, Peattie MR, Zhen J. * The Japanese colonial empire, 1895-1945. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1984.
1121.
Tetsuo N, Harootunian HD. Japan’s Revolt Against the West. In: The Cambridge History of Japan: The twentieth century, Vol 6. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1988.
1122.
Iriye A. Japan’s Drive to Great Power Status. In: The Cambridge History of Japan: The twentieth century, Vol 6. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1988.
1123.
Shillony BA. * Politics and culture in wartime Japan. Oxford: Clarendon; 1981.
1124.
Shillony BA. Wartime Japan: A Military Dictatorship, Vol 2. In: Shōwa Japan: political, economic and social history, 1926-1989. London: Routledge; 1998.
1125.
Sims RL. Chapter 6. In: Japanese political history since the Meiji Renovation, 1868-2000. London: Hurst & Company; 2001. p. 179–237.
1126.
Townsend SC. * Culture, Race and Power in Japan’s Wartime Empire. In: Japanese prisoners of war. London: Hambledon Press; 2000.
1127.
Townsend S. BBC - History - World Wars: Japan’s Quest for Empire [Internet]. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/japan_quest_empire_01.shtml
1128.
Young L. Japan’s Total Empire: Manchuria and the Culture of Wartime Imperialism [Internet]. 1st ed. Vol. v.8. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1998. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=842203