Eric Weitz presents a social and political history of German
communism from its beginnings at the end of the nineteenth century
to the collapse of the German Democratic Republic in 1990. In the
first book in English or in German to explore this entire period,
Weitz describes the emergence of the Communist Party of Germany
(KPD) against the background of Imperial and Weimar Germany, and
clearly explains how the legacy of these periods shaped the
character of the GDR to the very end of its existence.
In Weimar Germany, social democrats and Germany's old elites
tried frantically to discipline a disordered society. Their
strategies drove communists out of the workplace and into the
streets, where the party gathered supporters in confrontations with
the police, fascist organizations, and even socialists and employed
workers. In the streets the party forged a politics of display and
spectacle, which encouraged ideological pronouncements and harsh
physical engagements rather than the mediation of practical
political issues. Male physical prowess came to be venerated as the
ultimate revolutionary quality. The KPD's gendered political
culture then contributed to the intransigence that characterized
the German Democratic Republic throughout its history. The
communist leaders of the GDR remained imprisoned in policies forged
in the Weimar Republic and became tragically removed from the
desires and interests of their own populace.
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