'In a work of remarkable ambition and scope, Weir explores the complex relationship between socialism and secularism at a time when many workers retained ties to organized religion. Exposing the rifts within the German socialist movement over whether to pursue a radical secularist agenda, Weir's meticulous scholarship will be indispensable for all future scholars probing this relationship.' Mark Edward Ruff, author of The Battle for the Catholic Past in Germany, 1945–1980
'Red Secularism offers a panoramic history of the evolving relationship between socialism and secularism situated in one of the most complex sites and periods in modern European history: Germany between 1890 and 1933. Out of this dense, thorny context, Weir tells a story that allows the reader to put the historical concepts and actors in conversation. Red Secularism will be of great value not just for historians, but for anyone interested in religious-secular-political conflicts and their manifestations in contemporary life.' Victoria Smolkin, author of A Sacred Space Is Never Empty: A History of Soviet Atheism
'A must-read for scholars of (German)secularism, but also for those interested in the history and the historiography of social democracy, and for scholars of the history of modern Germany in general.' Katharina Neef, Secular Studies