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Hitler's Furies: German Women in the Nazi Killing Fields, Wendy Lower (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013), xv + 270 pp., hardcover $26.00, paperback $14.95, electronic version available
In: Holocaust and genocide studies, Band 29, Heft 2, S. 284-286
ISSN: 1476-7937
Nazi Propaganda for the Arab World (review)
In: Shofar: a quarterly interdisciplinary journal of Jewish studies ; official journal of the Midwest and Western Jewish Studies Associations, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 153-155
ISSN: 1534-5165
Deaf People in Hitler's Europe • Surviving in Silence: A Deaf Boy in the Holocaust: The Harry I. Dunai Story
In: Holocaust and genocide studies, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 123-127
ISSN: 1476-7937
Religion and Patriotism in German Peace Dramas during the Thirty Years' War
In: Central European history, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 131-148
ISSN: 1569-1616
One of the most important analyses of the rise of German nationalism was Koppel Pinson's Pietism as a Factor in the Rise of German Nationalism (1934). This study was one of the first to apply the methodology of Tawney, Dilthey, Troeltsch, and Weber to the analysis of early nationalism. Pinson held that the intellectual and social content of seventeenth–century Lutheran pietism "unknowingly" created many preconditions of the peculiar type of German nationalism that appeared in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Pinson argued that the qualities of pietism which were transferred to later German nationalism were strong emotional fervor, moral purity, the experience of conversion, and the cultivation of the German language. All social classes would be able to cultivate these spiritual aims, producing what Pinson called a general priesthood of believers, or salvation within and through the group. The identification of the qualities of the good German with those of the good Christian was for Pinson the crux of the process.
The management of workers. Sel. arguments
In: American labor: From conspiracy to collective bargaining. Series 2.
Wages, hours, and strikes: labor panaceas in the twentieth century
In: American labor (New York, N.Y.)
The labor problem of to-day, by F. A. Walker.--The source of business profits, by F. A. Walker.--The economic and social importance of the eight-hour movement, by G. Gunton.--The condition of labor: an open letter to Pope Leo XIII, by H. George.--What means this strike? By D. DeLeon.--The evolution of wage statistics, by C. D. Wright.--The American Federation of Labor, by M. A. Aldrich.--The I.W.W., by V. St. John.--Organized labor, by James Cardinal Gibbons.--The open shop, by C. S. Darrow.--The trade union movement, by J. Mitchell.--Shall trade unions be regulated by law? By S. Untermyer and M. Hillquit.--The American labor movement, by L. Wolman.--The American labor movement, by F. J. Haas
A plain man's talk on the labor question
In: American labor: From conspiracy to collective bargaining
Men, the workers
In: American labor (New York, N.Y.)
Books reviewed
In: Labor history, Band 3, Heft 3, S. 341-350
ISSN: 1469-9702