Review
'... both the narrative and the debate are always linked back to the analysis of power. This is an impressive achievement and distinguishes the book from conventional biographical studies of Bismarck.'
John Breuilly, Professor of Modern History, University of Birmingham
'This immediately takes its place as the best short biography of Bismarck in any language. Its command of the material is impressive, and it strikes a sensible balance between the traditional extremes of praising Bismarck as a hero who single-handedly created modern Germany or damning him as a villain who laid the foundations for the later rise of Nazism.'
Richard J. Evans, Professor of Modern History, University of Cambridge
'Dr Lerman's judgement of Bismarck's achievements and his ambiguous legacy is balanced, clear-sighted and sound.
This is a thoroughly recommendable book that will be of great benefit to students of modern Germany and nineteenth-century Europe.'
T.G.Otte, University of East Anglia
From the Back Cover
Otto von Bismarck was the dominant figure in nineteenth century German history and the architect of modern Germany. Under his leadership, Prussia waged three victorious wars and brought about the political unification of Germany in 1871. His policies transformed central Europe, led to a re-alignment of political forces within Germany and shaped a new German identity. But they also left a fateful legacy in the twentieth century, fuelling a virulent German nationalism that culminated in the catastrophe of Hitler and the Third Reich.
Bismarck¿s political career has always excited controversy. Katharine Lerman¿s accessible new study of the ¿Iron Chancellor¿ examines how Bismarck rose to dominate German politics, the ruthless manner in which he exercised power, the constraints on his power and why he was finally ousted in 1890. It provides fresh insights into Bismarck¿s ambiguous political legacy and explores such issues as his role in unification and the complex imperial German political system, his attitude to parliamentary democracy and ethnic minorities, his pioneering development of social welfare legislation and his reputation for diplomatic prowess.
Bismarck was both deified and detested but the pursuit and exercise of political power is central to understanding him as a man and statesman. This is an essential new guide to one of the key figures in modern German history.
Katharine Lerman is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at London Metropolitan University. She is the author of The Chancellor as Courtier: Bernhard von Bülow and the Governance of Germany 1900-1909 (1990) as well as numerous articles on imperial Germany.