One of the major distorting factors in any account of the Weimar Republic is what came after it. "Weimar democracy patently failed to prevent Hitler from coming to power and establishing a Nazi dictatorship, and thus for the most part studies have been concerned with identifying the reasons for this failure."
Ruth Henig, now Baroness Henig, plunges undaunted into a chronicle of the collapse of confidence in democracy with a swift trot through the divisions and tensions in German society that came with rapid industrialization and population growth from the 1870s onwards. Then comes the economic aftermath of WWI, and a close look at the revolutionary turmoil that formed the backdrop to a new constitution, one that aimed not only to build a democratic house but also to establish new social and economic rights for its inhabitants. Thus a certain amount of background is provided to a chronological examination of the turbulent years to follow.
This 'pamphlet' is one in a series aimed at students on introductory courses in higher education, so its main object is to offer an overview of central themes. It cannot encompass everything, and certainly refuses to detail the agenda or precise social basis of the many political parties, concentrating rather on the economic constraints that led from one crisis to the next, and the inability of the various parties to co-operate, compromise or coalesce. In just over a hundred pages of succinct prose, she focuses on the economic plight of a nation caught between war debt, reparations and a world recession, and on the intractable politics of splinter parties. The focus is very much on economics and politics.
Apart from this highly condensed assessment of the years of hyperinflation, occupation of the Rhineland, invasion of the Ruhr, Dawes plan, Young plan, the leadership of Stresemann and Brüning and the final dismantling of democracy, there is an invaluable final chapter that gives an outline of the historiography of this period, tracing the vigorous debate over culprits in the disaster that led to catastrophe. Baroness Henig comes down firmly on the side of those who see the Weimar Republic as lacking legitimacy: although there had been revolution, it was restricted. "Without far-reaching social and economic changes, the new regime could not operate efficiently."
Oh, and a very choice little list of 'further reading' and a handy three page chronology of events too. The picture on the cover is of Gustav Stresemann.