This important addition to modern German studies treats the Weimar
Republic and the Third Reich as a continuum, exploring its themes
through the 1920s and 1930s without artificial breaks. John Hiden looks
at key issues in political, social and economic history, and in
international relations. He highlights Germany's potentially
constructive role in Europe before Hitler; analyses the country's
structural problems; considers the importance of personalities and
personal responsibility in the period; and examines the legacy of the
Third Reich to postwar Germany. Filled with energy and ideas, the book
has an intellectual substance far beyond its relatively modest length.