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Harmful and Undesirable - Book Censorship in Nazi Germany (Hardcover)
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Harmful and Undesirable - Book Censorship in Nazi Germany (Hardcover)
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Like every authoritarian regime in history, Nazi Germany tried to
inhibit ideological freedom through book censorship. Between 1933
and 1945, Hitler's party orchestrated a massive campaign to take
control of all forms of communication in the nation. Although Nazi
propaganda has been widely studied, modern historians have
decidedly neglected book censorship. In this book, noted scholar
Guenter Lewy offers the first comprehensive analysis in English
language of the ways in which the Nazis exerted control over the
creation, publication, and distribution of books by authors,
publishers, bookstores, and libraries. While Goebbels' Propaganda
Ministry played a leading role, other entities engaged in
censorship, including the Ministry of Science, Education and
Popular Culture, Rosenberg's Office for the Advancement of German
Literature, and Bouhler's Party Commission for the Protection of
National Socialist Literature. The Gestapo and the Security Service
were also involved in the process of enforcement. All of these
organizations often acted on their own initiative both on the state
and on the local level. As a result of these overlapping
jurisdictions, the process of control was disorderly. This
illustrates once again that the Third Reich was monolithic in
theory but polycratic in practice. This book explores not only how
the Nazis implemented book censorship, but also the ways in which
this process affected German intellectuals. It deals with the
controversial issue of the so-called "inner immigrants" - authors
who were opposed to National Socialism but chose to remain in
Germany and concealed the true meaning of their writings by way of
allegories or parables, such as Gottfried Benn, Gerhart Hauptmann,
Ernst Junger, Jochen Klepper, and Ernst Wiechert. Describing the
fate of writers and publishers who came into conflict with the
organs of censorship, Lewy provides a disconcerting and realistic
portrait of intellectual life under the Nazi dictatorship.
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