German Peasants and Agrarian Politics, 1914-1924
The Rhineland and Westphalia
By Robert G. Moeller
304 pp., 6 x 9
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Paperback ISBN: 978-0-8078-6570-5
Published: September 2010 -
E-book PDF ISBN: 979-8-8908-6482-6
Published: October 2017 -
E-book EPUB ISBN: 978-1-4696-3974-1
Published: October 2017
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During the late nineteenth century, peasant farmers in the Rhineland and Wesphalia adjusted their production to a capitalist market and enjoyed an unprecedented period of prosperity that lasted until the outbreak of World War I. After August 1914 peasant producers confronted state intervention in the agricultural sector, regulation of prices and markets, and the subordination of agrarian interests to the demands of urban consumers. A controlled economy for many agricultural products continued into the postwar period.
Focusing on the Catholic peasantry, Moeller shows that peasant rejection of the Weimar Republic was firmly grounded in the immediate circumstances of the war economy and the uneven process of postwar recovery. He challenges the dominant view that rural support for conservative political solutions was primarily the product of the peasantry's hostility toward industrial capitalism and of long-term social and political affinities dating from the nineteenth century. Moeller's findings show that conservative agrarian ideology was carefully formulated in response to the specific peasant grievances that originated in this period of continuing economic and political crisis.
Originally published in 1986.
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Reviews
"Moeller's excellent study of the Rhenish and Westphalian peasantry compellingly challenges our traditional views of agrarian politics in imperial and republican Germany. It not only makes an important contribution to our understanding of the Weimar era but skillfully addresses itself to a set of major themes in modern German history."--Thomas Childers