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The Discreet Charm of the Police State: The Landpolizei and the Transformation of Bavaria, 1945-1965
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This book examines the relationship between authoritarian policing and the modernization of postwar Germany’s largest state in a passage from postwar crisis to consumer prosperity. Early in this tr...
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09 March 2007

This book examines the relationship between authoritarian policing and the modernization of postwar Germany’s largest state in a passage from postwar crisis to consumer prosperity. Early in this transition, pre-Nazi (but also pre-liberal-democratic) authoritarian police traditions reemerged to meet the challenges of public order in the U.S. occupation. Authoritarian policing then helped define the evolving relationship between society and state during the economic miracle of the 1950s. However, this regime’s success in midwifing a new, post-agricultural society led to its obsolescence and disappearance by the mid-1960s. This story highlights the role of state authoritarianism in the emergence of prosperous post-ideological societies during the later twentieth century.
Price: $185.00
Pages: 340
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Central European Histories
Publication Date:
09 March 2007
ISBN: 9789004157088
Format: Hardcover
"Canoy's book takes an unlikely subject as an entryway into considering longer lines of continuity in German history and will be read with profit by those interested in Bavarian history and German postwar developments."
Eve M. Duffy, The German Studies Review, 31:3 (2008) 634-635.
Eve M. Duffy, The German Studies Review, 31:3 (2008) 634-635.
Jose Raymund Canoy, Ph.D. (2001, History, Indiana University) is Assistant Professor of European History at the University of Oklahoma. His research interests focus on policing, state-society relations, war and society, deviance, criminality, and urban and rural change in modern Germany.