Abstract

Germany has undergone widespread and fundamental changes since the end of the First World War, which led to social divisions. Some saw Weimar Republic and the 1920s as a late modernization of Germany, while others saw it as a defeat. German conservatism, in particular, saw the violence of the Versailles treaty, the failure to manage crisis in the Weimar government, political turmoil, the Great Depression and the collapse of the German economy as the crisis of modernization.BR Conservatism saw this crisis in terms of the German political tradition, and as a result there was an insurmountable gap between modern and German conservatism. Their resistance to the political modernization of Germany, expressed in the Weimar Republic, was radical enough to bear the adjective contradictory name of

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