<p>
<em>“This is an excellent collection. Its clearly stated project is to revisit and revise existing historical accounts of media audiences and media consumption in Nazi Germany. The book presents a range of high calibre contributions, with much new and original research, and all offering innovative perspectives on the relation between media consumption, National Socialist political culture, and social and cultural life in Nazi Germany.”</em> <strong>• Erica Carter</strong>, Kings College London</p>

Through its focus on audiences and their reception of media in Nazi Germany, Audiences of Nazism inverts the typical top-down perspective employed in studies that concentrate on the regime’s regulation of media and propaganda. It thereby sheds new light on the complex character of the period’s media, their uses, and the scope for audience interpretation. Contributors investigate how consumers either appropriated or ignored certain messages of Nazi propaganda, and how some even participated in its production. The authors ground their studies on novel historical sources, including private diaries and letters, photographs and films, and concert programs, which demonstrate, amongst other things, how audiences interpreted and responded to regulated news, Nazi Party rallies, and the regime’s denunciation of modern works of art as ‘degenerate.’

Les mer

Innovating against the considerable gap in research surrounding historical media reception within Nazi Germany, Audiences of Nazism finds sources of actual audience responses to critically engage with the Third Reich’s media production legacy.

Les mer

List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Media and Their Users in Nazi Germany
Ulrike Weckel

Chapter 1. “To Constantly Swim against the Tide Is Suicide”: The Liberal Press and Its Audience, 1928–1933
Jochen Hung

Chapter 2. Active Audiences: Stürmerkästen and the Rise of Der Stürmer’s Activist Readership
Hannah Ahlheim

Chapter 3. Reading Fake News: The “Röhm Putsch,”: The Hitler Myth and the Consumption of Political News under the Nazis
Janosch Steuwer

Chapter 4. Beyond Approved Reactions: Assessments of the NSDAP’s Nuremberg Party Rallies in Diaries and Letters, 1933–1938
Annina Hofferberth

Chapter 5. Call and Response: The Creation of the National Socialist Public
Peter Fritzsche

Chapter 6. Advertising and Its Audiences in Weimar and Nazi Germany
Pamela Swett

Chapter 7. Concert Programs, Ideology, and the Search for Subjectivity in National Socialist Germany
Neil Gregor

Chapter 8. The “Entartete Kunst”: Exhibitions and Their Audiences
Bernhard Fulda

Chapter 9. Amateur Films from National Socialist Austria as Visual Responses to Nazi Propaganda
Michaela Scharf 

Chapter 10. The Media of Occupation: German Books and Photographs in France, 1940–1944
Julia Torrie

Chapter 11. The Migration of Topoi from Atrocity Films to Their Heirs: Modes of Addressing the Audience in German Post-War Cinema
Bernhard Gross

Chapter 12. Finding an Unintended Audience: An SS Photo Album and Its Post-War Editions
Ulrike Koppermann

Afterword
Jane Caplan

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781805390992
Publisert
2023-10-13
Utgiver
Berghahn Books
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
RES, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
302

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Ulrike Weckel is Professor of History in the Media and the Public at the Justus Liebig University Giessen. Her research interests include postwar dealings with Germany’s Nazi past, gender history, media history, and audience reception. She is the author of Beschämende Bilder. Deutsche Reaktionen auf alliierte Dokumentarfilme über befreite Konzentrationslager (Stuttgart 2012) and has analyzed audience responses to representa­tions of the Nazi past in various feature films and radio and theater plays.