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| | Review of Republican and Fascist Germany: Themes and Variations in the History of Weimar and the Third Reich, 1918-1945 |
 | | The role of police-based control during the Nazi period and the ideological and social foundations of the Volksgemeinschaft as a phenomenon serving to link the regime and the populace |
 | | And German motives also, of course, reflected various degrees of social and political acceptance of Nazism, a force which, Hiden acknowledges, mobilized significant mass support at a critical juncture in Weimar's attempt to master a daunting array of social, economic, and political crises. |
 | | The fact that Hitler's seizure of power was far from inevitable did not prevent the disturbing emergence of a viable, accepted Volksgemeinschaft, which in turn formed an essential underpinning of Nazi Germany's racial war. |
| www.ess.uwe.ac.uk /GENOCIDE/reviewstr3.htm (1024 words) |
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