Felix Brandt writes about the way democracies fracture from the inside out. Raised between old borders and new bureaucracies, he is drawn to the moments when laws still stand but meanings shift-when emergency becomes habit and habit becomes regime. His work is steeped in diaries, minor trials, and the unglamorous minutes of cabinet meetings, the places where grand narratives begin to move. Influenced by the scholarship of the Weimar era and the literature of Mittel-Europa, he approaches history as a set of living mechanisms rather than a museum of causes. Brandt's aim is simple and hard: to give readers a clear vocabulary for recognising when a republic is being unlearned, and a practical sense of what must be defended first.