TY - JOUR AU1 - Diehl, James M. AB - 136 Reviews of Books Arden Bucholz's excellently written and enjoyable Although Whalen imbeds the story in a largely book is an admirable introduction to Delbrilck's life conventional historical narrative, he turns com- and work. Although concentrating on Delbrtick's mendably to areas hitherto neglected in the social work as a military historian and his relationship with history of modern Germany. For example, there are the General Staff, this study illuminates many other interesting details about the sorts of disabilities in- aspects of the Germany of his time. Delbrtick's fate flicted on the warriors and the kinds of diseases was to be a liberally minded man in a country where suffered by the soldiers before and after the war's end. A self-contained chapter deals with "medical liberalism had not taken firm root and at a time when the liberal world view was shattered. He died solutions" to those problems. In the realm of psy- in 1929, a year after President Hindenburg and chology, Whalen devotes much attention to the prominent figures from business, the military, and mental anguish endured by these hapless veterans the university had feted him as Germany's greatest and their closest relatives, by widows, and by or- historian, TI - eve rosenhaft. Beating the Fascists? The German Communists and Political Violence, 1929–1933. New York: Cambridge University Press. 1983. Pp. xvi, 273 ... JF - The American Historical Review DO - 10.1086/ahr/91.1.136-a DA - 1986-02-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/eve-rosenhaft-beating-the-fascists-the-german-communists-and-political-mi6W4DSyLE SP - 136 EP - 137 VL - 91 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -