• Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; List of Abbreviations; Author's Acknowledgements; 1. Introduction; Structure of the book; The bringing together of labour movement and working-class history; The development of the SPD in the context of European Social Democracy; GDR and FRG historiography: trapped by finalistic narratives; The demise of Communism and the triumphalism of liberal capitalism; The labour movement and the project of capitalist modernisation; 2. The Origins of Social Democratic Identity, 1789-1875
  • Industrialisation and the origins of wage labourNineteenth-Century working-class lives; Early forms of working-class protest; Working-class women; Attempts to organise workers: insurrections, journeymen's organisations and workers' educational associations; 1848, the Brotherhood of Workers and middle-class anxieties; Liberals, Christians, Conservatives and Socialists; The crisis of German Lib-Labism in the 1860s; Social Democratic working-class parties and the beginnings of trade unionism; 3. Between Isolation and Integration, 1871-1918
  • Industrialisation and the continued heterogeneity of working-class livesWomen at work and in politics; The 'born proletariat' and the diversity of working-class identities: Eigen-Sinn, Christianity and ethnicity'; The Anti-Socialist Law and its consequences; Labour movement culture; The SPD between isolation and integration; Social Democratic internationalism and the First World War; 4. In Defence of the Republican State, 1918-1933; The revolution of 1918-19; The labour movement divided: Communists and Social Democrats; The heyday of anarcho-syndicalism; The Catholic labour movement
  • Stumbling stones on the SPD's road towards becoming a catch-all partySocial Democracy and the 'woman question'; Corporatism, Fordism and economic democracy; Social Democracy and the rise of Nazism; 5. Social Democracy under Conditions of Illegality, 1933-1989; Resistance to National; Workers and the Nazi state; Exile politics; Communists and Social Democrats after 1945; SED and workers in the socialist state; From campaigns against Social Democracy to the Social Democratisation of the SED; The rebirth of Social Democracy from among the citizens' movement; The Party of Democratic Socialism
  • 6. From Golden Age to the End of Social Democracy? The FRG, 1945-1998Social Democracy and the German Left after the war: continuities and discontinuities; Remaking the SPD in the long years of opposition, 1949-1966; The deproletarianisation of West German society; The Grand Coalition, 1966-1969; The social-liberal coalition, 1969-1982; New converts? The SPD, the middle classes and organised religion; Social Democracy and the challenge of the Green Party; Intra-party divisions and the struggle between modernisers and traditionalists in the SPD
  • Social Democracy and the challenges of neo-liberalism
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011832236