Until his death in a Gestapo prison cell, Rudolf Hilferding was a prominent socialist theorist and politician in Europe. As a leading economic thinker in the socialist movement and a key figure in the German Social Democratic Party, he served as Weimar finance minister during the 1923 inflation crisis and again in 1928 at the onset of the depression. Amid Germany's ongoing economic and political turmoil, he championed social democracy's efforts to bolster the republic and achieve socialist goals. This intellectual biography highlights how Hilferding's personal and intellectual journey mirrored the failures of social democracy in confronting nazism and communism. After Hitler's rise to power in 1933, he continued the fight against the Nazis while in exile. However, in 1940, he was arrested by Vichy authorities and handed over to the Gestapo. Throughout his life, Hilferding tackled key issues in modern socialism, such as finance capitalism, imperialism, and the organization of socialist parties. He believed that democratic freedom was central to socialism and, by opposing both communism and fascism, contributed significantly to the discourse on totalitarianism. His insights into Marxist theory and practice remain crucial for understanding socialism's evolution in the twentieth century.
William Smaldone Books



Focusing on the evolution of European socialism, this text examines its roots in the industrial and democratic revolutions of the eighteenth century. The updated edition features a new preface addressing the 2016 American election, revised bibliographies, and two additional chapters, along with an afterword, enriching the exploration of socialism's relevance in contemporary society.
Confronting Hitler
- 334 pages
- 12 hours of reading
Confronting Hitler examines the lives of ten socialist leaders in their fight against Nazism. It reveals the aspects of these people's lives that most decisively shaped their views and actions during the Weimar Republic's final crisis, and it compares the German socialist experience of 1933 with those of other democratic socialist movements in the twentieth century.