Germany's right-wing organizations gathered in Bad Harzburg in October 1931 to celebrate the unity of the "national opposition" and to lay the foundation for the transfer of power from the government of Heinrich Brüning to the radical Right. But unity proved ephemeral, for before, during, and after the rally serious divisions surfaced within the so-called national front, most notably between the National Socialists and the conservative members of the "national opposition" as embodied by Alfred Hugenberg's German National People's Party and the Stahlhelm. The rally thus failed to fulfill its promise and, in the end, only hardened the divisions within the radical Right.
German Studies Review, the scholarly journal of the German Studies Association, is published three times each year, in February, May, and October. The journal publishes articles and book reviews in history, literature, culture studies, political science, as well as interdisciplinary topics relating to the German-speaking areas of Europe encompassing primarily, but not exclusively, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Articles and reviews are published in English or German. Each issue contains at least seven articles and sixty book reviews. German Studies Review is a journal of first publication, and all submissions are peer-reviewed. German Studies Review is included in Historical Abstracts, Current Contents, Current Geographical Publications, and other indices, and is assigned the acronym GerSR for the MLA International Bibliography. German Studies Review is published by the German Studies Association and Carleton College.
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