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Social Democracy and Society

Social Democracy and Society

Social Democracy and Society

Working Class Radicalism in Düsseldorf, 1890–1920
Mary Nolan
November 2003
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Paperback
9780521524681

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    Social Democracy and Society examines the origins of working-class radicalism in Imperial Germany. The Düsseldorf Social Democratic Party was associated with the left wing of the SPD. It defended theoretical orthodoxy against the onslaughts of revisionism, rejected all cooperation with bourgeois groups, and advocated militant tactics. Professor Nolan argues that the roots of this radicalism extended deep into the Imperial period and sprang from a confrontation between Düsseldorf's working class, which was variously young, highly skilled, migrant, and new to industry, and a political and cultural environment that offered no reformist options. She examines the distinct roles played by peasant workers new to industry, skilled migrant workers, and the indigenous population of Catholic workers. This is the first study to investigate in detail the history of the socialist labor movement in an urban area that was heavily Catholic and to analyze the significance of Catholicism for the political culture of the working class.

    Product details

    November 2003
    Paperback
    9780521524681
    392 pages
    229 × 152 × 22 mm
    0.57kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Introduction
    • Part I. The Era of Frustration:
    • 1890–1903:
    • 1. The hostile environment: Düsseldorf in the 1890s
    • 2. Social democracy and political Catholicism
    • 3. A false start
    • 4. Ideological unity and organizational disarray
    • Part II. Ambiguous Success and Radicalization:
    • 1903–1912:
    • 5. Skilled migrants, peasant workers, and native Catholics
    • 6. Party building and popular culture
    • 7. Expansion and optimism
    • 8. Move to the left
    • 9. The limits of reformism
    • Part III. Radicals Become Revolutionaries:
    • 1912–1920:
    • 10. Things fall apart
    • 11. War
    • 12. Revolution
    • Conclusion
    • Appendix
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Mary Nolan