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> Bitterness over the Versailles Treaty
> The inadequacy of the Republic and the ineffectiveness of Hindenburg as President
> Economic despair associated with the Inflationszeit or hyperinflation crisis
> The Great Depression
> Anti-Semitism
No, none of these. Fritzsche says "it should be stated clearly that Germans became Nazis because they wanted to become Nazis and because the Nazis spoke so well to their interests and inclinations." The removal of anti-semitism as a motivator would seem to contradict Daniel Goldhagen's thesis in HITLERS WILLING EXECUTIONERS, where it is argued that persecuting Jews was the raison d'etre for Nazis. Also, Ian Kershaw in HUBRIS, in studying the motivating factors in the life stories of 581 Nazi party members, found that less than 75 were driven by anti-semitism. If Fritzsche is correct and the interests and inclinations that caused Germans to metamorphose into Nazis do not include social and economic factors, then what else is there? Answer - politics.
The political organization, the devotion to the cause, the energy, and the message of the Nazis; all are shown to have had significant appeal to the populous. The Nazis were organized if nothing else. They held 2,370 public meetings throughout Germany in 1925 and by 1929 they had 3,400 party branches across the country. Their ideological appeal was based on their portrayal of themselves as "a party that was constructive, that would move forward and bring Germans together in a militant Volksgemeinschaft" (community of people).
Fritzsche is fairly dry and prosaic in the manner in which he goes about making the case that it was the political aspirations of the people that the Nazis most appealed to. Yet he marshals sufficient evidence to be convincing.
What role did Hitler play in all of this? You'll have to read about that elsewhere as Fritzsche has very little to say about him in the entire book. This seemed strange at first but it's in keeping with a truism that the great Hitler biographers have recognized. To understand Hitler you have also to look at German society. Fritzsche does not say as much, but his books emphasis on the power of politics in German society is testimony enough to that fact.
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