Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany
Transcription
Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany
10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 This page intentionally left blank 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany Nadine Rossol 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Sport, Spectacle and Political Symbolism, 1926–36 © Nadine Rossol 2010 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The author has asserted her right to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 2010 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN Palgrave Macmillan in the UK is an imprint of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS. Palgrave Macmillan in the US is a division of St Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Palgrave Macmillan is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world. Palgrave® and Macmillan® are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries. ISBN 978–0–230–21793–5 hardback This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham and Eastbourne 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 No portion of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, Saffron House, 6-10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS. Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Für Emma 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 This page intentionally left blank 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol List of Illustrations ix List of Abbreviations xi Acknowledgements xii Introduction 1 1 Bodies and Urban Space: Parades, Marches and Demonstrations 1890s–1920s ‘When the Germans learned to demonstrate . . .’: Demonstrations in Imperial Germany The republic and parades: Expressing republican spirit or militaristic principles? ‘A black-red-gold storm in German Cities’: Interpreting urban space 13 14 18 25 2 Sports and Games 1925–1928 Frankfurt in 1925: The Workers’ Olympics Cologne’s Kampfspiele in 1926: Sport and the nation ‘Turnvater Jahn’ and republican festivities in August 1928 34 35 42 49 3 Staging the Republic: Constitution Day Festivities in 1929 ‘Staging the Republic’: Ideas, concepts, problems Flags, masses and parades: August 1929 A republican mass spectacle: Performing unity 58 59 66 71 4 Republican Nationalism: The Rhineland Celebration in 1930 The republic and nationalist themes The Rhineland as part of festive representation The Rhineland mass spectacle in 1930 80 81 85 90 5 Party Rallies and the Thingspiel in the Third Reich Nazi Party Rallies: Staging the Volksgemeinschaft The Nazi Thingspiel: A National Socialist theatre form vii 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol 102 103 108 Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Contents viii Contents 113 6 The Death of the Spectacle in the mid-1930s The festive play at the Olympic Games in 1936 The death of the spectacle in the mid-1930s Territorial unity in 1938: The sporting festival in Breslau 121 122 129 133 7 ‘Like 100 years ago . . .’: Local Festivities in Weimar and Nazi Germany Constitution Day celebrations at local level The Reichsbanner and its festivities Reforming popular taste: The Nazis and local celebrations 139 140 145 150 Conclusion 158 Notes 166 Bibliography 204 Index 222 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 The Loreley and the Thingspiel: Rhine romantic and spectacles 1.1 Illustrierte Reichsbanner Zeitung, 21.8.1926, title page: Der Tag der Hundertausend in Nürnberg. Courtesy of Verlag J.H.W. Dietz Nachf 1.2 Constitution Day Celebration 1928. Courtesy of Institut für Stadtgeschichte Frankfurt am Main 1.3 Der Heimatdienst, IX, no.3, February 1929, title page: Zum Jubiläum der Deutschen Nationalversammlung 2.1 Workers’ Olympics 1925. Courtesy of Institut für Stadtgeschichte Frankfurt am Main 2.2 Kampfspiele 1926. Courtesy of Carl und Liselott Diem-Archiv, Cologne 2.3 Kampfspiele 1926. Courtesy of Carl und Liselott Diem Archiv, Cologne 2.4 Illustrierte Reichsbanner Zeitung, 26.5.1928, no. 21. Courtesy of Verlag J.H.W. Dietz Nachf 2.5 Der Heimatdienst, VII, no. 15, 1. Augustheft 1928, Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, 11.8.1778 3.1 Illustrierte Reichsbanner Zeitung, 22.8.1925, no.34, Einst und Jetzt: Ein ‘Volksfest 1913’ in Berlin, Verfassungsfeier der Republikaner 1925 in Berlin. Courtesy of Verlag J.H.W. Dietz Nachf 3.2 Festschrift zur Bundesverfassungsfeier Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold 10-11. August, Berlin 1929 (Berlin, 1929) cover 3.3 Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg, NL Redslob, I,B-240, Das 12 Uhr Blatt, 12.8.1929, no.187. Courtesy of Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg 4.1 Illustrierte Republikanische Zeitung, 9.8.1930. Courtesy of Verlag J.H.W. Dietz Nachf 4.2 Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg, NL Redslob, Festspiel zur Rheinlandbefreiung. Courtesy of Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg ix 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol 21 27 28 39 46 48 50 55 62 69 75 84 93 Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 List of Illustrations x List of Illustrations 94 116 117 While every effort has been made to trace right holders, if any have been inadvertently overlooked the publishers would be pleased to make the necessary arrangements at the first opportunity. 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 4.3 Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg, NL Redslob, Festspiel zur Rheinlandbefreiung. Courtesy of Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg 5.1 Loreley Thingspiel site 1935/36. Courtesy of St. Goarshausen Archiv 5.2 Loreley Thingspiel arena completed. Courtesy of St. Goarshausen Archiv AdsD BArch Berlin BLHA DAF DDP DNVP DVP FRG GDR GNM, DKA GStAPK IRZ KdF LAB NL NSDAP PSK RAD RM SA SPD Archiv der sozialen Demokratie Bundesarchiv Berlin Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv Potsdam Deutsche Arbeitsfront (German Labour Front) Deutsche Demokratische Partei (German Democratic Party) Deutschnationale Volkspartei (German Nationalist People’s Party) Deutsche Volkspartei (German People’s Party) Federal Republic of Germany German Democratic Republic Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nürnberg, Deutsches Kunstarchiv Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz Illustrierte Reichsbanner Zeitung/ later: Illustrierte Republikanische Zeitung Kraft durch Freude (Strength through Joy organisation) Landesarchiv Berlin Nachlass Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (National Socialist German Workers’ Party) Provinzial Schulkolleg Reichsarbeitsdienst (State Labour Service) Reichsmark Sturmabteilung (Nazi stormtroopers’ organisation) Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschland (German Social Democratic Party) xi 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 List of Abbreviations One of the nicest tasks of writing a book is to thank all those who have contributed to its completion. My first debt is to Anthony McElligott, who supervised my PhD thesis on which this book is based. As he will know best, his unfailing confidence, academic mentoring, moral support and friendship have helped me immeasurably. I could not have wished for a kinder and, at times, more challenging mentor who made sure that I would only give my best. For all that I would like to thank him. Over the years, I had the pleasure of discussing my research with a number of people whose suggestions have helped me to form my ideas. Many of them have shared my research in Berlin with me. I am grateful to David Meeres, Christoph Jahr, Susanne Kiewitz, Ute Krickeberg and Jens Thiel. Special thanks are due to Tina Dingel for her good-humoured moral support. Christian Welzbacher and Bernd Buchner share my fascination for the Reichskunstwart and have inspired me with their own works. Bernd Buchner generously took the time to read and comment on the PhD thesis. I have benefited greatly from his knowledge on Social Democratic symbols. For their insightful comments on the manuscript undoubtedly turning this into a better book, I am particularly grateful to Moritz Föllmer, Anthony McElligott, Matthew Potter, Willemijn Ruberg and David Welch. When I started my PhD in the History Department at the University of Limerick in 2002, I experienced the light-hearted companionship of the extraordinary postgraduate community there. Friends and colleagues in the History Department found time to proof read pieces of my work and provided practical help when it came to juggling academic tasks. My thanks go to all of them. Thanks also to Emmanuelle Bossé, Willemijn Ruberg and Claudia Siebrecht for their companionship in the past years. Rachael Powell and Babette Pütz have accompanied my work with their interest and friendship ever since I have met them in St Andrews. In Germany my friends Andrea Schlüter, Anja Sager and in particular Dorothea Scigala Ostrek have contributed more than they might be aware of to the completing of this study. My book would not have been possible without the great assistance of numerous archivists and librarians in Berlin, Bonn, Cologne, Frankfurt xii 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Acknowledgements xiii am Main, Koblenz, Leipzig, Nuremberg, Potsdam and St. Goarshausen. I would like to thank Dr Hans-Georg Golz (Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung), Mareike Malzbender (Dietz Verlag), Werner Bonn (Archiv St. Goarshausen), Dr Birgit Jooss (Deutsches Kunstarchiv im Germanischen Nationalmuseum Nürnberg), Michael Winter (Carl und Liselott Diem-Archiv Köln) and Irmgard Bartel (Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Bonn). I had the pleasure of presenting parts of my work at the German Historical Institute in London, the Centre for Historical Research in Limerick, the University of St Andrews, the German Studies Association conference in St Paul and the research seminar of Heinrich A. Winkler at the Humboldt University Berlin. The participants of these seminars provided further thoughtful comments of which I have benefited greatly. I was very fortunate to have received generous funding for my work. Plassey Campus Centre in Limerick and the Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences supported me with postgraduate scholarships. The Faculty of Humanities at the University of Limerick helped with a one-year fee waiver and a number of conference grants. I am particularly grateful for the support and the sustained interest in my work of the Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences (IRCHSS). A two-year postdoctoral fellowship granted by the IRCHSS allowed me to complete my book and embark on a new research project. This book is dedicated to my little goddaughter and niece Emma. As much as for Emma the book is for my entire family whose encouragement, warmth and humour have helped me tremendously. Despite the constant absences I inflict upon them since my undergraduate years in Scotland, I can count on their unconditional support for my academic journeys. I know that this is not a small matter. 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Acknowledgements Writing on Weimar and Nazi Germany, with an eye to political culture, means first of all dealing with a number of images and assumptions closely linked to both periods. The term ‘Weimar culture’ evokes a set of mental snapshots. Some of them are of the stunning Marlene Dietrich, the modern architecture of the Bauhaus, or Charleston-dancing girls in short dresses. Breathtaking cultural prosperity stands in sharp contrast to political turmoil and economic depression. In these images Weimar Germany is crisis-ridden and exciting at the same time. The failure of the republic and the sense of an intensive, but all too short, experiment in republican democracy and cultural modernity in Germany still inspire scholars writing on Weimar to devise book titles such as Dancing on the Volcano or Promise and Tragedy.1 However, we need to keep in mind that the cultural admiration of 1920s Germany is in part a post1945 phenomenon.2 After the collapse of the Nazi regime, the limelight of Weimar culture shone even more brightly. Historians have helped to create these impressions, too.3 In addition, the condemnations of the alleged political shortcomings of the republic need to be placed in the context of the late 1940s and early 1950s when ‘learning from Weimar’s mistakes’ became the guideline for reconstructing Germany’s shattered political system.4 It is this division of the Weimar era into spectacular culture on the one hand and disastrous politics on the other that has long impeded scholars from concentrating on an area in which the fusion of culture and politics was practised—republican state representation.5 The attempts by the young Weimar Republic to promote its democratic state-system to the German population with the help of symbols, monuments and festivities have long been neglected in historical research. Instead, republican representation has been negatively contrasted to allegedly more successful Nazi festivities.6 The claim that the republic 1 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Introduction Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany never reached the hearts and minds of its citizens is added to the long list of Weimar’s shortcomings. Once again, the republican experience is placed in ‘the antechamber of the Third Reich’.7 Indeed, it is Nazi propaganda that provides us with the next set of images illustrating some of the difficulties we are faced with. Scenes from Leni Riefenstahl’s films on Nazi Party Rallies or photographs of thousands of people waiting for the arrival of the Führer are part of our collective memory of the Third Reich. Whether or not we have personal experiences of the Nazi regime is irrelevant. In fact, images of the Third Reich seem to be gaining, rather than losing, appeal. It is quickly forgotten that they were mostly the result of staged and rehearsed performances and were created to be used as pieces of propaganda.8 Historical studies, which question the effectiveness of Nazi propaganda and caution against overstating its impact, have not yet been able to change commonly held perceptions. The Third Reich’s propaganda machinery is considered to be masterly in its seductive and manipulating allure.9 Walter Benjamin’s concept stressing the use of aesthetics in politics has become commonplace in interpretations of Nazi representation, especially with regards to festivities, celebrations and spectacles.10 ‘Gesamtkunstwerk of political aesthetics’ or ‘formative aesthetics’ are terms used to analyse festivities in the Third Reich.11 They suggest that the Nazis developed a specific style for their festivities with a deliberate focus on aesthetics, symbols, decoration and festive set-up. This alleged distinctive Nazi style is emphasised even more by positively contrasting it to the supposedly sober and boring celebrations of the Weimar Republic. The trinity of manipulation, seduction and political aesthetics is difficult to break up. My study challenges the notion that the Nazis invented the use of aesthetics for the staging of their mass events and argues instead that the time span from the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s can be considered as a whole with regard to the development of political aesthetics and festive culture. A stress on rhythm, moving bodies and national community characterised many mass events in the republic and strongly influenced festivities, parades, sporting activities and spectacles commissioned by the republican state in the Weimar years. When the National Socialists came to power in 1933, they continued and expanded many of the previously applied festive styles. Consequently, by the mid-1930s, the closing point of my book, the public had been well accustomed to the use of aesthetics in mass-staged events by political organisations and by the state alike. In fact, at the end of the period covered in my study, representational forms based on mass involvement in particular mass 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 2 3 plays—which had previously been so popular—were no longer believed to express the Zeitgeist anymore. The seven chapters of the present work follow a broad chronological outline. Commencing with an overview on demonstrations in late Imperial Germany, their focus shifts to festive events of the mid- and late 1920s and eventually to Nazi festivities of the mid-1930s. In addition to the chronological order, I concentrate on individual themes closely linked to the development of ceremonial customs and festive aesthetics. Discourses relating to festive choreographies, mass staging and theatrical performances shape this book. For the Weimar Republic, the stark contrast between difficult political and economic circumstances and enormous cultural productivity led to a whole range of negative crisis metaphors.12 However, recent works on Weimar Germany have started to suggest more open approaches to the period. Scholars have shown that contemporaries attached multilayered meanings to the term ‘crisis’ which were sometimes positive, linking ‘crisis’ to new opportunities and options in the future.13 New approaches to the Weimar Republic have not only challenged the negative crisis concept—so closely linked to the notion of a ‘doomed’ republic—but also focused on cultural history more than previous works. This does not mean breaking away from political history but rather combining both areas.14 Thomas Mergel has shown in his 2002 study on parliamentary culture in Weimar Germany how a cultural history approach can shed new light on the study of politics.15 This is applied for the areas of republican representation and political culture, too. Different political milieus are analysed with greater interest in issues of cultural identities.16 While older studies on political symbols and festivities in Weimar Germany have mainly examined opposing political groups forging their public celebrations and symbolic representation against each other,17 recent works have started to shift the focus away from the political extremes.18 Studies concentrating on the efforts of the Weimar state and republican organisations to publicly present the young democracy to the population have suggested more open and, indeed, more positive approaches to the allegedly boring, sober and timid representative efforts in the Weimar years.19 In addition, republican political culture on the ground—carried by democratic parties and other republican groups—has received more nuanced attention than simply portraying it as sandwiched between the political extremes.20 After this outlook on research trends, we want to concentrate more closely on issues of aesthetic representation and festive performances as part of the political culture of the 1920s and 1930s. While festivities, spectacles and parades were already used by the monarchy to present 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Introduction Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany and communicate its politics to the public, an essential change in style and representation of politics occurred after the First World War.21 Bernd Weisbrod argues that the war experience and its perception had created a crisis for previously established symbolic forms of politics resulting into a political style that stressed the visual, the performative and the dramatic.22 The rhetoric of all political affiliations promised salvation in the future and in so doing diverged more and more from political reality. Furthermore, the potential opponent was demonised leading to the dramatising of political decisions.23 Wolfgang Hardtwig takes up this important focus on visual, performative and aesthetic aspects of political culture for the interwar years but he largely excludes the supporters of Weimar democracy from this development. He claims that the democrats stayed far behind the medial possibilities of their time to visualise and personify politics.24 Taking a more nuanced approach, I will show that state representation in 1920s Germany echoed modern cultural developments with a stress on three areas: the visual, the inclusive and the spectacular. Both mass entertainment and elite culture in the Weimar Republic were largely ‘a culture of the visual’;25 and the same holds true for the republic’s state representation, which was also characterised by a particular ‘inclusiveness’—that is, official encouragement to participate actively in public festivities and great state occasions. In addition, there was an emphasis on the overall impression of representative events, as can be seen in the ways in which they were planned and staged. This is what I mean by the ‘spectacular’ aspect of representative culture in Weimar Germany. Clearly these elements were not limited to the representative matters of the Weimar state but used by political parties as well as by the Nazi state after 1933. In fact, the philosopher Peter Sloterdijk considers a public performance culture as a common denominator for various political factions, including Weimar Germany’s democrats, in the interwar years. He writes: From expressionism to Marlene Dietrich’s spectacular legs in the film The Blue Angel, from the bloody comedy of the Hitler putsch in 1923 to the performance of the Three-Penny-Opera, from the impressive funeral ceremony for Walther Rathenau in 1922 to the travesty of the Reichstag fire in 1933 . . . the constant crisis everyone talked about was a good director creating spectacular effects.26 The time frame suggested in my study, 1926 to 1936, might seem surprising at first and requires further explanation. Research on early 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 4 5 twentieth-century Germany has begun to challenge the legitimacy and importance of conventional political breaks—such as 1918, 1933 and 1945—for developments in German history. Some works have shifted the turning points to the end of the First World War and the beginning of the second one arguing that the interwar years qualify as a distinctive time period.27 Other scholars extend the boundaries even further to the Imperial period either from 1914 to 1945 or, more creatively, from 1916 to 1936.28 This is not done to deprive the Weimar Republic of its distinctiveness or to crush it between Imperial and Nazi Germany, but rather meant to sharpen the eye for continuities and discontinuities. Hence more fluid boundaries between political state forms are proposed. However, the areas of state representation, public rituals and mass festivities are still often neglected in this development. I take the efforts of the Weimar state and of republican organisations to visually present the new democracy to a mass audience as the starting point for my study. It was not until the mid-1920s that these attempts, often prepared earlier, but postponed due to financial, political and economic instabilities, eventually bore fruit. Although the ‘stable middle years’ of the republic were not as stable and peaceful as sometimes suggested, the lack of direct political threats to the existence of the Weimar state created breathing space in which new representative methods and concepts were tried out. Therefore, the mid-1920s constitute a good starting point for this book. Similarly a decade later, in the mid-1930s, changes occurred again. This time the inclusion of the public in mass spectacles, hailed as a key principle of successful festivities and often wrongly interpreted as a feature introduced by the National Socialists, started to lose its appeal. I have already referred to the increased interest in recent historical research on cultural matters including visual history, identity formation and national memory.29 Linked to this development, we are also witnessing a ‘performative turn’ in historical studies. Peter Burke’s insightful essay ‘Performing History: The Importance of Occasions’ offers an overview on the various areas that can be fruitfully examined with greater attention to the notion of performance. They range from the study of emotions and the examination of political language to the focus on festivals and theatrical performances.30 As much as the concentration on performance can be applied to the study of text, for example the performance of emotions in letter writing, it is often understood as an approach with its main focus on actions, symbols and rituals. It has become a normal part of historical analysis for scholars working on the medieval and early modern period but for the twentieth century there 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Introduction Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany still remains much to explore using the significant insights that a closer examination of public performances can offer.31 In my study, I concentrate on public performances in the form of spectacles, parades, political assemblies and sports activities.32 These different strands of a public performance culture shaped the early twentieth century.33 The limitations of examining festivals, spectacles, parades and assemblies lie in the very nature of these events. They were unique experiences affecting participants and spectators in ways which written sources as well as visual ones can only partially capture. Consequently, the various political and cultural meanings which the organisers inscribed into these performances become particularly important to offer the ‘intended’ interpretative framework for the audience. Many concepts discussed in relation to theatrical productions and public performances play an important role in my study showing that visual, performative and spectacular aspects were essential not only for theatre directors and choreographers but also for public representations of the state and its political message. Theatre directors, dance choreographers, artists and actors debated whether spatial reforms of their stages would lead to different ways of staging their theatrical productions. The importance of rhythmic movements was discussed as much as the more active inclusion of the audience.34 In fact, the theatre triggered and responded to contemporary discourses on the body, on spatial conceptions and on modern technology as well as on the relationship between the masses and the individual.35 We will see that many of these issues influenced the planning of those responsible for the staging of public festivities from the mid-1920s onwards. My book centres on five mass spectacles. Chapter 1 provides an overview on changes in the staging of parades and demonstrations in Germany from the 1890s to the mid-1920s. In focusing on peaceful street demonstrations of the working class in the Kaiserreich, Chapter 1 illustrates the importance allocated to the participants’ behaviour and to the route the demonstrations took through the urban environment. Later the chapter concentrates on the Weimar years and examines how republican organisations and the Weimar state interpreted urban space for the republican cause. Chapter 2 offers a comparative analysis of two mass-staged sporting events in the mid-1920s: the socialist Workers’ Olympics in 1925 and the bourgeois Kampfspiele (combat games) in 1926. Despite the different political ideologies, the choreographies were strikingly similar. Chapter 2 will also illustrate that the republican state used sports to complement its festivities aiming at increasing their popularity. Moving to the late 1920s, Chapter 3 examines different 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 6 7 ways of ‘staging the republic’ with a particular focus on a mass spectacle commissioned and financed by the Weimar state in 1929 as part of its annual republican celebration. This chapter traces how organisers and planners attempted to present the spectacle as an aesthetic expression of republican democracy. While Chapter 4 examines another mass spectacle commissioned by the republic in 1930, it shows nationalist instead of republican overtones. The ‘liberation’ of the Rhineland in the summer of 1930, namely the withdrawal of foreign troops from the area, was celebrated with a mass play that was nationalist in contents and innovative in its staging. The themes of national regeneration and territorial wholeness were at the centre of the play. These four chapters also illustrate a development in the bodily expressions used at public performances. Parades and sporting activities were eventually, as Chapters 3 and 4 show, incorporated into the extended framework of mass spectacles. The following three chapters, from Chapter 5 to Chapter 7, concentrate on the Third Reich. Chapter 5 offers a short overview on the staging of Nazi Party Rallies and focuses in more detail on the Nazis’ efforts to create their specific National Socialist mass theatre, the Thingspiel. Applying many of the principles characteristic of experimental theatre reforms of the Weimar years, the Thingspiel movement only flourished in the early years of the Nazi dictatorship and ended in the mid-1930s. The construction of the Loreley Thingspiel stage at the Rhine will exemplify the monumental ideas behind the project as well as its failure. Chapter 6 concludes the examination of mass spectacles with a look at the festive play staged at the opening ceremony of the Berlin Olympic Games in 1936, one of the last spectacles of its type to be performed in the Third Reich. Furthermore, the chapter examines the sporting festival in Breslau in 1938 bringing together the important themes of sports and territorial unity. Finally, Chapter 7 shifts the focus to local festivities and shows that very few of the concepts characterising mass-staged events had an impact on local level. Local festive styles remained largely unchanged. Members of republican organisations in the 1920s and Nazi propagandists in the 1930s attempted to reform local festivities echoing the same demands relating to the discipline of the participants, the tasteful decoration of the venue and, above all, the avoidance of Kitsch and light entertainment. Several key themes run through the chapters illustrating continuities between the Weimar and the Nazi period. First of all, spatial dimensions of festivities, parades and spectacles were debated in various forms in the time period under consideration here. Political connotations of the 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Introduction Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany (often) urban environment in which the festive event took place were immensely important. Urban space was interpreted and reinterpreted by different political groups aiming at imprinting their political message(s) upon this environment. Meanwhile, efforts to reform the actual space of performances, for example moving from theatre houses to open-air stages, were taken on board by most organisers of festivities regardless of their political conviction. Next to the importance of spatial issues, the theme of national regeneration through the restoration of territorial wholeness dominated discourses on celebrations, festivities and spectacles. This seemingly nationalist topic was at the centre of almost all festive performances in the 1920s and 1930s ranging from sporting activities particularly welcoming German participants from ‘occupied areas’ over republican spectacles celebrating the Rhineland ‘liberation’ to Nazi Party Rallies stressing Großdeutschland. Although all the festive performances examined in my study used the aesthetic appeal of the masses, their political connotations differed substantially. When commenting on mass events, republican organisations wrote delightedly of mass support for the young democracy. The Weimar state interpreted mass participation in festivities as resembling a community of equals capturing the main principle of democracy in this way. In the Nazi dictatorship, mass participation was presented as the support of the ‘people’s community’ for Hitler. While political interpretations of the masses differed, its aesthetic appeal—when structured, ordered and organised—applied to the entire period from the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s. The order of disciplined bodies making up geometric shapes or forming—through simultaneous movements—the impression of one national body fascinated many. It was also a well-established part of popular entertainment in both Weimar and Nazi Germany. Films and revues presented orderly and disciplined bodies in dancing groups or in filmic mass scenes.36 To add to popular entertainment, disciplined bodies were an essential element of working-class demonstrations and parades since the early twentieth century. Connected to disciplining bodies was disciplining the behaviour of those taking part in festive events. As much as these festive forms appealed throughout the 1920s and 1930s, we will see that there was also criticism on them. Ordered and disciplined movements were criticised as resembling militaristic drill by some. Nevertheless, it was only in the mid-1930s when the fascination with orderly formations of collective mass bodies came to an end. To be sure, there existed an international dimension to the aesthetic elements and performative styles that will be examined here 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 8 9 for Germany. A focus on mass choreographies and spectacles, on welltrained bodies and disciplined participants, and on sports and aesthetics characterised festive staging in democracies and dictatorships alike in the 1920s and 1930s, both in Europe and the USA. Similarities and reciprocal influences have been examined for totalitarian regimes such as Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy which demonstrate that Italy served as a role model when it came to the staging of festivities.37 Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi argues that aesthetic considerations were central to the construction of Italian fascism. This included the shaping of the disciplined fascist man both as an individual and as a part of an orderly crowd.38 For Soviet Russia, Malte Rolf and others have analysed festivities in detail. Sport parades played an important role in them presenting the trained bodies of athletes as visions of the new man in the country’s future.39 A comparison of festivals and celebrations in dictatorships including Italy, Russia and Japan can be found in the 2006 special issue of the Journal of Modern European History.40 However, it was not just dictatorial regimes that influenced each other. Public performance culture in the early twentieth century ranged from reform ideas in theatre staging, the novelty and freshness expressed in modern dance to the ever-increasing emphasis on inclusive and visually appealing mass events. Already the international connections between artists, theatre directors, choreographers and dancers meant that these developments did not remain confined to one country.41 The theatre historian Erika Fischer-Lichte shows that mass spectacles of the interwar years can be interpreted as universal attempts of searching for a solution when confronted with a crisis scenario. She argues that mass spectacles in Europe and the USA were a form of political theatre characterised by a combination of theatrical elements and political rituals that aimed at inclusion, community and collective identity, regardless of the political state form of the country.42 Still, not many studies have focused on the aesthetic forms, reference points and representative means of democracies. The dictum that political aesthetics belong to the field of totalitarian regimes seems to be a long lasting one. The fact that democratic states also need to communicate and ‘perform’ messages to the public has only recently begun to influence historical studies. For Germany, the National Socialist legacy in this area is hard to shake off.43 However, works on the signs and symbols of democratic parliaments have made a beginning in this field.44 In her innovative study on body and dance culture in the early twentieth century, Inge Baxmann suggests that the formation of an orderly and disciplined national body—symbolised through mass spectacles, 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 Introduction Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany parades and processions—had been long established in Germany and France relying on similar rituals and festive means. Unlike the Weimar state that needed to inscribe political meaning(s) in mass spectacles, France possessed an established national festive culture in which bodily practices stood for republican attributes and national community. Baxmann writes: ‘Exercises of well formed bodies and synchronised movements were expression of the orderly masses that had been transformed into the state’s citizens. Gymnastic exercises and games were part of the political staging representing the opposite of the asocial, violent masses . . .’45 Clearly, discussions erupting in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s on the inclusiveness of festivities, political connotations of spectacles, the participation of the audience and the representative devices of mass performances were not confined to Germany. ∗ ∗ ∗ Before we focus on parades and demonstrations examined in Chapter 1, some background information important for the whole study should be provided. While the name of the Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels can be placed into context by many, his predecessor in the Weimar years is less well known. It was the art historian Dr Edwin Redslob (1884–1973) who was responsible for giving cultural and artistic shape to republican state representation and, in so doing, making the republic visible to the population. After the end of the First World War and the collapse of the monarchy, a democratic state was introduced to the German population for the first time. To deal appropriately with the challenges of republican state representation, a new state position, the Reichskunstwart, was created in 1920. The small office was linked to the Reich Ministry of the Interior. Edwin Redslob was appointed as head of the office and the first, and only, Reichskunstwart. Redslob’s office was dissolved when the Nazis came to power. While the office of the Reichskunstwart was generally forgotten after 1945, Edwin Redslob is remembered most for his activities after the Second World War. With others, he founded the newspaper Der Tagespiegel and was one of the founding fathers and acting rector of Berlin’s Free University to name his most important initiatives.46 In the Weimar years, the Reichskunstwart was to be involved in all areas of cultural state representation. This included the creation of new state symbols, the staging of state celebrations and the erection of monuments. Redslob helped to shape the public face of the republic. In practice, the work of the Reichskunstwart was made difficult by limited 10.1057/9780230274778preview - Performing the Nation in Interwar Germany, Nadine Rossol Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to npg - PalgraveConnect - 2017-01-16 10 You have reached the end of the preview for this book / chapter. You are viewing this book in preview mode, which allows selected pages to be viewed without a current Palgrave Connect subscription. Pages beyond this point are only available to subscribing institutions. 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