The Path to Christian Democracy : : German Catholics and the Party System from Windthorst to Adenauer / / Noel D. Cary.

From the time of Bismarck's great rival Ludwig Windthorst to that of the first post-World War II Chancellor, Konrad Adenauer, the Catholic community in Germany took a distinctive historical path. Although it was by no means free of authoritarian components, it was at times the most democratic p...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter HUP e-dition: Complete eBook Package
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Place / Publishing House:Cambridge, MA : : Harvard University Press, , [2013]
©1996
Year of Publication:2013
Edition:Reprint 2014
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource (355 p.)
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface --
Introduction: Another Sonderweg? --
PART I. The Center Party and Interdenominationalism in the Kaiserreich, 1870–1917 --
1. The Enemy of the State --
2. Labor, Party, and Zentrumsstreit --
PART II. Initiatives and Inertia, 1917–1922 --
3. Defeat, Revolution, Reorientation --
4. The Essen Program and Its Aftermath --
PART III. From Weimar to Hitler, 1923–1933 --
5. Political Mavericks and Catholic Consciousness --
6. The Fall of the Tower --
PART IV. Reshaping Party Politics, 1945–1957 --
7. Catholics at the Zero Hour --
8. The CDU of Konrad Adenauer --
9. The CDU and Jakob Kaiser --
10. The Center Party and Karl Spiecker --
11. The Fusion Fiasco --
12. Helene Wessel and the Christian Opposition --
Epilogue: The End of Weltanschauung? --
Abbreviations --
Notes --
Index
Summary:From the time of Bismarck's great rival Ludwig Windthorst to that of the first post-World War II Chancellor, Konrad Adenauer, the Catholic community in Germany took a distinctive historical path. Although it was by no means free of authoritarian components, it was at times the most democratic pathway taken by organized political Catholicism anywhere in Europe. Challenging those who seek continuity in German history primarily in terms of its long march toward Nazism, this book crosses all the usual historical turning points from mid-nineteenth- to late-twentieth-century German history in search of the indigenous origins of postwar German democracy. Complementing recent studies of German Social Democracy, it links the postwar party system to the partisan traditions this new system transcended by documenting the attempts by reform-minded members of the old Catholic Center party to break out of the constraints of minority-group politics and form a democratic political party. The failure of those efforts before 1933 helped clear the way for Nazism, but their success after 1945 in founding the interdenominational Christian Democratic Union (CDU) helped tame political conservatism and allowed the emergence of the most stable democracy in contemporary Europe. Integrating those who needed to be integrated--the cultural and political conservatives--into a durable liberal order, this conservative yet democratic and interdenominational "catch-all" party broadened democratic sensibilities and softened the effect of religious tensions on the German polity and party system. By crossing traditional chronological divides and exploring the links between earlier abortive Catholic initiatives and the range of competing postwar visions of the new party system, this book moves Catholic Germany from the periphery to the heart of the issue of continuity in modern German history.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780674419032
9783110353488
9783110353563
9783110442212
DOI:10.4159/harvard.9780674419032
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Noel D. Cary.