Abstract

Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
BRICKNER, RICHARD M.
Is Germany Incurable?
New York , 1943 .
2.
DICKS, HENRY V.
Psychological Foundations of the Wehrmacht , War Office Research Memorandum , 1944 .
3.
DICKS, HENRY V.
”The German Deserter” id. 1944 .
4.
DICKS, HENRY V.
”German Political Attitudes” id. 1944 .
5.
DICKS, HENRY V.
”National Socialism as a Psychological Problem ” id. 1945 .
6.
DICKS, HENRY V.
”The Ten Categories.”
Internal Memorandum, German Personnel Research Branch, Control Commission for Germany (British element)
1945 .
7.
DICKS, HENRY V.
” Why the Germans became Nazis ” (B.B.C. Broadcast) . The Listener , June, 1947 .
8.
DICKS, HENRY V.
” The Psychological Approach to the German Problem,”
The Royal Institute for International Affairs , Private Memorandum, 1947 .
9.
ERICKSON, E. H.
” Hitler's Imagery and German Youth,”
Personality . ed.
Kluckhohn
and
Murray
, New York , 1948 .
10.
FROMM, ERICH
, The Fear of Freedom , London , 1942 .
11.
KECSKEMETI P.
, and
LEITES, N.
” Some Psychological Hypotheses on Nazi Germany,”
The Library of Congress , Washington D.C. , Document No. 60, 1945 .
12.
LEVY, DAVID M.
”The German Anti-Nazi: a Case Study.”
Am. JA. of Orthopsychiatry , July, 1946 .
13.
RODNICK, DAVID
. Post-war Germans . New Haven and London , 1948 .
14.
SCHAFFNER, BERTRAM
. Fatherland . New York , 1948 .
15.” Germany After the War.” Report of a Conference held at Columbia University , New York , mimeographed 1944 .
