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HI136 The History of Germany Lecture 19

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Title: HI136 The History of Germany Lecture 19


1
HI136 The History of GermanyLecture 19
  • Germany and Europe
  • The Debate on German Peculiarities

2
German Unification, 1862-1870
  • After 1815 Germany made up of 39 independent
    states.
  • Growing demands for unification.
  • 1848 failure of liberal bourgeois revolution.
  • Economic industrial development helped
    unification, eg. the Zollverein customs union.
  • 1864-71 Wars of Unification, expelled Austria
    united Germany under Prussian leadership.

3
Imperial Germany, 1871-1918
  • Authoritarian government, but some degree of
    democracy rule of law.
  • Forces of reaction balanced by forces of change.
  • Saw rapid industrialisation which brought both
    increased prosperity social dislocation.
  • Emergence of aggressive nationalism fears of
    social unrest may have led to decision to go to
    war in 1914.
  • War led to economic hardship military
    dictatorship. Defeat discredited the regime led
    to collapse of the monarchy.

4
The Weimar Republic, 1918-33
  • Faced significant problems of legitimacy from the
    beginning defeat, revolution, Versailles treaty,
    economic problems etc.
  • Characterised by economic upheaval political
    extremism.
  • Attempts to balance German political traditions
    with West European democratic traditions.
  • But democracy endured for 15 years.
  • Achievements
  • Guarantee of civil rights.
  • More equal society.
  • Cultural flowering.
  • World economic crisis initiated final crisis.

5
The Third Reich, 1933-45
  • Debate over continuities with what went before
  • Nationalism, militarism, racism etc. present in
    Germany before 1933
  • But the Nazis took them to extremes.
  • Economic revival in 1930s.
  • Attempts to reshape German society bring it
    into line with Nazi ideology.
  • Police state not governed by the rule of law.
  • Germans also victims of Nazism.
  • War genocide ultimately led to disaster for
    Germany.

6
West Germany, 1949-90
  • Rooted in Western democratic, free market
    traditions.
  • Rapid economic recovery in the 1950s helped
    produce a prosperous stable society.
  • But reaction against this in the 1960s and 70s.
  • Nevertheless, the system itself not challenged.
  • By the 1980s West Germany was a stable democracy,
    firmly entrenched in Western Europe.

7
East Germany, 1949-90
  • Roots in the Soviet occupation led to problems of
    legitimacy.
  • A single party state ruled by the SED.
  • Party rule bolstered by the secret police (Stasi)
    a paternalistic welfare state.
  • Planned economy had some successes (rapid
    industrialisation in the 1950s), but by the 1980s
    had become stagnant riddled with corruption.
  • Despite problems much support from citizens until
    the late 1980s.
  • Changing international situation reform in the
    Soviet Bloc paved the way for collapse in 1989.

8
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9
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10
Germanys Special Path (Sonderweg)
  • Term originated in the 19th century Germanys
    political, economic military success were down
    to unique values institutions. Germany was
    pursuing a middle way between Tsarist Autocracy
    western democracy.
  • After 1945 the notion took on a more negative
    slant Germany had taken a wrong turning on
    the path to modernity which led to National
    Socialism.
  • 1960s Wehler failed bourgeois revolution led
    to Germany developing a modern economy governed
    by pre-modern elites (monarchy, army,
    aristocracy).
  • 1980s Blackbourn Eley German middle class
    disempowered in political life but dominated
    culture society. Sonderweg a flawed tool for
    looking at German history.

11
Continuity in German History
  • Related to the debate over Sonderweg is the issue
    of continuities in modern German history.
  • 1940s 50s West European American historians
    saw the Third Reich as the result of flaws in the
    German character while West German historians
    saw it as an aberration the consequence of
    wider European trends.
  • 1960s Fischer controversy new debate on
    Sonderweg led to structuralist historians
    identifying highlighting continuities between
    Imperial Nazi Germany.
  • Undoubtedly there are similarities no period of
    history is divorced from what precedes it but
    this approach can be misleading.
  • Hindsight shouldnt mislead us into assuming that
    the course of history was fixed.

12
Geographical Argument
  • Assertion that Germanys historical development
    has been shaped by its geography.
  • Germanys position at the centre of Europe made
    it a meeting place for different cultures and
    ideas,
  • But it also made it vulnerable to attack.
  • This led to development of Prussian military
    monarchy the adoption of an aggressive foreign
    policy on the grounds that attack was the best
    form of defence.
  • After both World Wars Germany was at the mercy of
    its enemies, and its position at the heart of
    Europe made it the focus of Cold War rivalries
    and tensions.
  • Martin Kitchen geography had a psychological
    effect on the Germans nationalism the result of
    a jealous hatred of the west an arrogant
    disdain for the east.

13
Historical Argument
  • Germanys fractured fragmented history is the
    key to understanding its development in the 20th
    century.
  • Germany became a nation-state comparatively late,
    which led to the development of an unstable
    national consciousness national inferiority
    complex.
  • History of particularism made it difficult to
    integrate different groups into German society
    after 1871, leading to the growth of an assertive
    nationalism (Wehler negative integration).
  • Debates between champions of federalism
    centralisation continued in the 20th century
    the Nazis tried to eliminate federal tradition
    bring all of Germany under central control.
  • Revival of federalism after World War II seen as
    an important feature in ensuring stability
    preventing a resurgence of nationalism.
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