The War for Legitimacy in Politics and Culture 1936-1946presents the first investigation of how the phenomenon of political legitimacy operated within Europe's political cultures during the period of the Second World War. Amidst the upheavals of that turbulent period in Europe's twentieth-century history, a wide variety of contenders for power emerged, each of which claimed to possess the right to rule.Exploring political discourse, state propaganda, and high and low culture, the book argues that legitimacy lay not with rulers, and still less in the barrel of a gun, but in the values behind differing approaches to good government. An important contribution to the study of the political culture of wartime Europe, this volume will be essential reading for both political scientists and twentieth-century historians.
Chapter 1: To be or not to be? * Chapter 2: German peculiarities? * Chapter 3: German unification * Chapter 4: Germany under Bismarck * Chapter 5: Germany astray? * Chapter 6: Escape into war? * Chapter 7: The war trauma * Chapter 8: Why did German democracy fail? * Chapter 9: How did the Nazis rise to power? * Chapter 10: Building up a dictatorship
Martin Conway is a Fellow in History at Balliol College, University of Oxford. Peter Romijn is Head of Research at the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation (NIOD), Amsterdam, and a Professor at the University of Amsterdam