Artigo Revisado por pares

The Myth of the Pro-Colonialist SPD: German Social Democracy and Imperialism before World War I

2012; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 45; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0008938912000350

ISSN

1569-1616

Autores

Jens Uwe Guettel,

Tópico(s)

Communism, Protests, Social Movements

Resumo

In his seminal The German Empire , published in German in 1973, historian Hans-Ulrich Wehler posited that in respect to the German Empire's colonial policies only the SPD, unlike all other political parties, “retained its capacity to take a critical view on matters of principle.” Moreover, in Wehler's view, the SPD's critical stance on this and many other political questions along with the party's massive electoral gains in the 1912 parliamentary elections precipitated a situation in the years immediately preceding the Great War that prompted the German Empire's “old elites” to bet increasingly on a major military conflict to solve the Empire's internal political tensions (“leap into darkness”). Thus in Wehler's view the Social Democrats contributed in no small part to Imperial Germany's perceived domestic crisis, which prompted the infamous “old elites” to choose war over domestic reform in 1914.

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