结论在最后一段:
The Nazi Party was therefore without doubt a Volkspartei: recruiting its
members and its voters across a broad range of social groups, from both sexes
and from the older as well as the younger generation. However, this support
was never able to deliver enough votes for a parliamentary majority, nor was
it distributed randomly across German society. Being a Catholic, unemployed
or living in a large town significantly reduced the likelihood of voters to
opt for Hitler, as did the existence of strong ideological and political
traditions. Conversely, being a Protestant in rural Germany greatly increased
such a propensity, as did the absence of strong loyalties. The structure of
Nazi support therefore requires that explanations of the rise of Hitler are
not simply reduced to the experiences and sentiments common to all Germans,
but must take into account both the timing of Nazi success and the specific
grievances of those who did choose the NSDAP to speak for them.
【 在 Dinothere (即使再忙也得灌水) 的大作中提到: 】
: 原文是英文的,多多包涵。
:
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_0/m1373/n10_v48/21207858/print.jhtml: Who voted for the Nazis?(electoral history of the National Socialist German
: Workers Party)(includes bibliography)(Cover Story)
: History Today, Oct, 1998, by Dick Geary
: Dick Geary sums up the latest research into the voting patterns of the
: German
: people in the crucial years that brought Hitler to power.
: Between 1928 and 1932, the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP)
: became the most popular of Germany's many political organisations. It had
: won
: no more than 2.6 per cent of votes cast in the Reichstag election of 1928
: but
: just two years later registered massive gains, winning 18.3 per cent of the
: ...................
--
FROM 202.112.11.*