Nancy Reagin analyzes the rhetoric strategies and programs of more than eighty bourgeois women&#x2019;s associations in Hanover a large provincial capital from the Imperial period to the Nazi seizure of power. She examines the social and demographic foundations of the Hanoverian women&#x2019;s movement interweaving local history with developments on the national level. Using the German experience as a case study Reagin explores the links between political conservatism and a feminist agenda based on a belief in innate gender differences.<br/><br/>Reagin&#x2019;s analysis encompasses a wide variety of women&#x2019;s organizations &#x2014; feminist nationalist religious philanthropic political and professional. It focuses on the ways in which bourgeois women&#x2019;s class background and political socialization and their support of the idea of 'spiritual motherhood' combined within an antidemocratic climate to produce a conservative maternalist approach to women&#x2019;s issues and other political matters. According to Reagin the fact that the women&#x2019;s movement evolved in this way helps to explain why so many middle-class women found National Socialism appealing.