Rec wanted: book on different schools of chess

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catahoula2

We see labels like "romantic chess," "modern chess," "hypermodern chess," "Russian dynamism," etc., referring to different schools of chess in history. As players we know roughly what they mean. As lovers of culture we also know about Romantic art, modern art, etc. There seems to be a loose relationship between chess and other cultural arts. Is there a good book that examines these different styles of chess in the context of larger cultural or historical movements?

For example, I learned that while we admire Steinitz and Lasker for bringing about the modern, more scientific way of playing, the Nazis blamed them as Jewish players who put an end to the "Aryan" way of playing romantic chess. It makes no sense to us, of course, but it's an interesting historical footnote.

Thanks!