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Weimar Republic Sourcebook [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 830 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 248x165x48 mm, weight: 1542 g
  • Serija: Weimar & Now: German Cultural Criticism 3
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Nov-1995
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • ISBN-10: 0520067754
  • ISBN-13: 9780520067752
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 830 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 248x165x48 mm, weight: 1542 g
  • Serija: Weimar & Now: German Cultural Criticism 3
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Nov-1995
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • ISBN-10: 0520067754
  • ISBN-13: 9780520067752
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
A laboratory for competing visions of modernity, the Weimar Republic (1918-1933) continues to haunt the imagination of the twentieth century. Its political and cultural lessons retain uncanny relevance for all who seek to understand the tensions and possibilities of our age. The Weimar Republic Sourcebook represents the most comprehensive documentation of Weimar culture, history, and politics assembled in any language. It invites a wide community of readers to discover the richness and complexity of the turbulent years in Germany before Hitler's rise to power.
Drawing from such primary sources as magazines, newspapers, manifestoes, and official documents (many unknown even to specialists and most never before available in English), this book challenges the traditional boundaries between politics, culture, and social life. Its thirty chapters explore Germany's complex relationship to democracy, ideologies of "reactionary modernism," the rise of the "New Woman," Bauhaus architecture, the impact of mass media, the literary life, the tradition of cabaret and urban entertainment, and the situation of Jews, intellectuals, and workers before and during the emergence of fascism.
While devoting much attention to the Republic's varied artistic and intellectual achievements (the Frankfurt School, political theater, twelve-tone music, cultural criticism, photomontage, and urban planning), the book is unique for its inclusion of many lesser-known materials on popular culture, consumerism, body culture, drugs, criminality, and sexuality; it also contains a timetable of major political events, an extensive bibliography, and capsule biographies. This will be a major resource and reference work for students and scholars in history; art; architecture; literature; social and political thought; and cultural, film, German, and women's studies.

Recenzijos

"A mosaic panorama. . . . Interweaving classic texts with a wealth of excavated matter, [ the editors] have done a great service to anyone interested in what modernism was and, through reinterpretation, may yet become." * San Francisco Chronicle * "The Weimar Republic Sourcebook will almost certainly transform the way the intellectual legacy of the Weimar Republic is thought about and taught in the English-speaking world."  * Modernism/modernity * "Unquestionably, The Weimar Republic Sourcebook is a wonderful resource. . . . Courses on German culture could easily be built around the book's chapters. In addition, it should be on the reading list of all prospective anthologists."  * H-German * "This is an essential book for anyone teaching a course on the Weimar Republic, and advanced students should be advised to purchase it." * German History *

Preface xvii A NEW DEMOCRACY IN CRISIS The Legacy of the War 5(30) War Neuroses and ``Psychic Trauma (1918) 7(1) Ernst Simmel The Treaty of Versailles: The Reparations Clauses (1919) 8(1) Speech of the German Delegation, Versailles (1919) 9(3) Count Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau The Dogma of Guilt (1919) 12(3) Ernst Troeltsch The Stab in the Back (1919) 15(1) Paul von Hindenburg Appeal for a General Strike (1920) 16(1) Social Democratic Party (SPD) The Stab-in-the-Back Legend? (1922) 16(2) Willi Wolfradt Fire (1922) 18(2) Ernst Junger The Spirit of 1914 (1924) 20(3) Kurt Tucholsky Erich Maria Remarques All Quiet on the Western Front (1929) 23(1) Carl Zuckmayer The Outlawed (1929) 24(1) Ernst von Salomon Why War? (1933) 25(10) Albert Einstein Sigmund Freud Revolution and the Birth of the Republic 35(25) Spartacus Manifesto (1918) 37(1) The Meaning and Idea of the Revolution (1918) 38(2) Heinrich Mann Founding Manifesto of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) (1918) 40(6) Rosa Luxemburg The Constitution of the German Republic (1919) 46(5) On Ebert and the Revolution (1919) 51(1) Count Harry Kessler Remembering Eisner (1919-1920) 52(1) Wilhelm Hausenstein Democracy and Parliamentarism: Their History, Their Enemies, and Their Future (1928) 53(3) Theodor Heuss Revolution in Berlin (1931) 56(4) Bernhard Prince Von Bulow Economic Upheaval: Rationalization, Inflation, and Depression 60(26) Editorial on the Occupation of the Ruhr (1923) 62(1) Das Tagebuch Overwrought Nerves (1923) 63(1) Friedrich Kroner The Dawes Committee Report (1924) 64(3) Hugo Stinnes (1925) 67(1) Ernst Neckarsulmer The Organized Economy (1927) 68(4) Rudolf Hilferding Alfred Hugenberg (1929) 72(2) Erich Schairer Bank Failures (1929) 74(1) B. Traven Postwar Concentration in the German Iron Industry (1930) 75(2) Erwin Kupzyk A Moral History of the Inflation (1931) 77(1) Hans Ostwald The Inflation Boom (1932) 78(2) Rolf Wagenfuhr Speech to the Lausanne Conference (1932) 80(4) Franz von Papen The Unemployed (1933) 84(2) Heinrich Hauser Coming to Terms with Democracy 86(33) The Old and the New Germany (1918) 88(1) Friedrich Meinecke The German Democracy (1918) 89(3) Ernst Troeltsch Politics as a Vocation (1918) 92(4) Max Weber We Nay-Sayers (1919) 96(4) Kurt Tucholsky Four Years of Political Murder (1922) 100(4) Emil Julius Gumbel German Center Party Program (1922) 104(1) The German Republic (1922) 105(4) Thomas Mann Editorial on the Anniversary of the Death of Walther Rathenau (1923) 109(1) Das Tagebuch Defending the Republic: The Great Fashion (1924) 110(2) Carl Von Ossietzky Social Democratic Party (SPD) Program (1925) 112(3) German Peoples Party (DVP) Program (1931) 115(2) For Carl von Ossietzky (1932) 117(2) Kurt Tucholsky The Rise of Nazism 119(26) The Russian Jewish Revolution (1919) 121(2) Alfred Rosenberg The Struggle of the Age (1920) 123(1) Adolf Bartels German Workers Party (DAP) The Twenty-Five Points (1920) 124(3) National Socialism or Bolshevism? (1925) 127(3) Joseph Goebbels Mein Kampf (1927) 130(3) Adolf Hitler Marriage Laws and the Principles of Breeding (1930) 133(4) R.W. Darre Why Are We Enemies of the Jews? (1930) 137(1) Joseph Goebbels Address to the Industry Club (1932) 138(4) Adolf Hitler German Farmer You Belong to Hitler! Why? (1932) 142(1) Fighting League for German Culture (1932) 143(1) Joseph Goebbels On the Nietzsche Archive and the German Elections (1932) 144(1) Count Harry Kessler The Struggle against Fascism 145(36) Hitlers Force (1924) 147(3) Ernst Bloch An Appeal to Reason (1930) 150(9) Thomas Mann Theories of German Fascism (1930) 159(5) Walter Benjamin The German Decision (1931) 164(3) Heinrich Mann How Do We Struggle Against a Third Reich? (1931) 167(1) Lion Feuchtwanger Communist Party of Germany, Open Letter (1931) 167(2) Cultural Bolshevism (1932) 169(2) Joseph Roth Ten Theses (1932) 171(1) Paul Tillich National Socialism: A Menace (1932) 172(9) Ewald von Kleist-Schmenzin PRESSURE POINTS OF SOCIAL LIFE White-Collar Workers: Mittelstand or Middle Class? 181(14) Our Stand at the Abyss (1921) 182(1) Hans Georg The Bank Clerk (1923) 183(1) Margot Starke The Labor Market for White-Collar Workers (1924) 184(1) Fritz Schroder Rationalization in Business Management (1929) 185(2) Wilhelm Kalveram The Misery of the ``New Mittelstand (1929) 187(2) Hilde Walter Shelter for the Homeless (1930) 189(2) Siegfried Kracauer The Old and New Middle Classes (1932) 191(4) Theodor Geiger The Rise of the New Woman 195(25) The Special Cultural Mission of Women (1919) 197(1) Marianne Weber Manifesto for International Womens Day (1921) 198(2) Die Kommunistin The Right to Abortion (1922) 200(2) Manfred Georg Paragraph 218: A Modern Gretchen Tragedy (1926) 202(2) Gabriele Tergit The Defenseless: A Conversation between Men (1928) 204(1) Alfred Polgar Women and the New Objectivity (1929) 205(1) Max Brod This is the New Woman (1929) 206(2) Elsa Herrmann My Workday, My Weekend (1930) 208(2) Textile Workers Twilight for Women? (1931) 210(2) Hilde Walter Womens Work and the Economic Crisis (1931) 212(1) The Kienle Case (1931) 213(3) Else Kienle Working Women (1932) 216(2) Siegfried Kracauer Back to the Good Old Days? (1933) 218(2) Alice Ruhle-Gerstel Forging a Proletarian Culture 220(28) On Proletarian Culture (1920) 222(1) A.R The Psyche of the Proletarian Child (1925) 223(1) Otto Ruhle Schiffbek (1925) 224(4) Larissa Reissner Conquer Film! (1925) 228(2) Willi Munzenberg Art is a Weapon! (1928) 230(2) Friedrich Wolf Program for a Proletarian Childrens Theater (1928) 232(2) Walter Benjamin Our Front (1928) 234(3) Johannes R. Becher A Survey on Proletarian Writing (1929) 237(2) The Proletarian Mass Novel (1930) 239(1) Otto Biha Progress in the Workers Music Movement (1931) 240(2) Hanns Eisler Willi Bredels Novels (1931) 242(2) Georg Lukacs League of Proletarian-Revolutionary Writers, To All Proletarian-Revolutionary Writers, To All Workers Correspondents (1931) 244(1) Berlin Workers District (n.d.) 245(3) Gunther D. Dehm The Jewish Community: Renewal, Redefinition, Resistance 248(37) Nationalism (1921) 250(3) Martin Buber Jewish Sketches (1921--1922) 253(2) Efraim Frisch The Countenance of Eastern European Jews (1922) 255(2) Arnold Zweig What We Strive For (1922) 257(1) S. Steinberg Editorial, The German Spirit (1924) 258(1) Das Tagebuch The New Thinking (1925) 259(3) Franz Rosenzweig Ideological Self-determination of Bar Kochba: The New Year of the Jewish Gymnastics and Sports Association Bar Kochba (1927) 262(1) Edgar Marx Wandering Jews (1927) 263(5) Joseph Roth Jewish Self-Hatred (1930) 268(3) The odor Lessing On the 1930 Edition of Rosenzweigs Star of Redemption (1931) 271(1) Gershom Scholem Central Association of German Citizens of the Jewish Faith, Flyer (1932) 272(4) Anti-Semites (1932) 276(9) Carl von Ossietzky INTELLECTUALS AND THE IDEOLOGIES OF THE AGE Redefining the Role of the Intellectuals 285(24) The ``Intellectuals (1919) 287(1) Gertrud Baumer The Writer and the State (1921) 288(3) Alfred Doblin The Function of Intellectuals in Society and Their Task in the Proletarian Revolution (1923) 291(3) Franz W. Seiwert Franz Pfemfert The Predicament of Intellectual Workers (1923) 294(1) Alfred Weber The Revolution of the Intelligentsia (1929) 295(2) Hans Zehrer Ideology and Utopia (1929) 297(4) Karl Mannheim Philosophy and Sociology: On Karl Mannheims Ideology and Utopia (1930) 301(1) Hannah Arendt We and the Intellectuals (1930) 302(2) Ernst von Salomon Left-Wing Melancholy (1931) 304(3) Walter Benjamin On the Writer (1931) 307(2) Siegfried Kracauer Critical Theory and the Search for a New Left 309(21) Leo Schlageter: The Wanderer in the Void (1923) 312(2) Karl Radek Marxism and Philosophy (1923) 314(2) Karl Korsch The Impotence of the German Working Class (1927) 316(2) Max Horkheimer The State of Contemporary Social Philosophy and the Tasks of an Institute for Social Research (1931) 318(4) Max Horkheimer Politicizing the Sexual Problems of Youth (1932) 322(3) Wilhelm Reich On the Sociology of Literature (1932) 325(2) Leo Lwenthal The SPD and NSDAP are Twins (1932) 327(2) Ernst Thalmann Social Democratic Party (SPD), The Iron Front for a United Front! (1932) 329(1) Revolution from the Right 330(25) The Third Empire (1923) 332(2) Arthur Moeller van den Bruck On the Contradiction between Parliamentarism and Democracy (1926) 334(4) Carl Schmitt Where We Stand (1926) 338(1) Ernst Niekisch Berlin Stahlhelm Manifesto (1927) 339(2) Literature as the Spiritual Space of the Nation (1927) 341(1) Hugo von Hofmannsthal The Concept of the Political (1927) 342(3) Carl Schmitt German Nationalism, German Theater (1931) 345(2) Arnolt Bronnen Revolution from the Right (1931) 347(1) Hans Freyer German National Peoples Party (DNVP) Program (1931) 348(4) Germany and the Conservative Revolution (1932) 352(3) Edgar J. Jung Cultural Pessimism: Diagnoses of Decline 355(38) The Decline of the West (1918) 358(2) Oswald Spengler The Culture of Making It Easy for Oneself (1920) 360(2) Count Hermann Keyserling The Catholic Cultural Offensive and Political Catholicism (1924--1925) 362(3) Willy Hellpach The Longing of Our Time for a Worldview (1926) 365(3) Herman Hesse Being and Time (1927) 368(1) Martin Heidegger On Danger (1931) 369(4) Ernst Junger The Spiritual Situation of the Age (1931) 373(2) Karl Jaspers The Worker: Domination and Form (1932) 375(2) Ernst Junger German Cultural Policy (1932) 377(3) Franz von Papen After Nihilism (1932) 380(4) Gottfried Benn The Middle Ages, 1932 (1932) 384(2) Ludwig Bauer May the Individual Not Be Stunted by the Masses (1932) 386(7) Alfred Doblin THE CHALLENGE OF MODERNITY Imagining America: Fordism and Technology 393(19) Americanism (1925) 395(2) Rudolf Kayser The Monotonization of the World (1925) 397(3) Stefan Zweig Fordism (1926) 400(2) Friedrich von Gottl-Ottlilienfeld Worshipping Elevators (1926) 402(2) Friedrich Sieburg The Mass Ornament (1927) 404(3) Siegfried Kracauer America and the New Objectivity (1928) 407(1) Adolf Halfeld The Anglicization of Germany (1929) 408(2) Felix Stoossinger Rationalization and the Social Order (1931) 410(2) Otto Bauer Berlin and the Countryside 412(17) The Spirit of Berlin (1919) 414(1) Ludwig Finckh The Romanic Cafe (1926) 415(3) Matheo Quinz Berlin and the Provinces (1928) 418(2) Kurt Tucholsky The Suspicious Character (1929) 420(3) Franz Hessel We Go to a Cafe Because (1930) 423(1) Egon Erwin Kisch The Intellectual and His People (1930) 423(2) Wilhelm Stapel The Charm of Berlin (1932) 425(1) Harold Nicolson Creative Landscape: Why Do We Stay in the Provinces? (1933) 426(3) Martin Heidegger Designing the New World: Modern Architecture and the Bauhaus 429(25) A Program for Architecture (1918) 432(3) Bruno Taut Program of the Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar (1919) 435(3) Walter Gropius Paul Schultze-Naumburg Architecture and the Will of the Age (1924) 438(1) Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Who is Right? Traditional Architecture or Building in New Forms (1926) 439(6) Walter Gropius Paul Schultze-Naumburg The New World (1926) 445(4) Hannes Meyer The Aesthetics of the Flat Roof (1926--1927) 449(1) Adolf Behne Paul Westheim The Bauhaus in Dessau (1927) 450(1) Rudolf Arnheim Why This Architecture? (1928) 451(2) Erich Mendelsohn Metal Furniture and Modern Spatiality (1928) 453(1) Marcel Breuer Housing for the Masses 454(20) The Earth is a Good Dwelling (1919) 456(4) Bruno Taut Path and Goal (1920) 460(1) Martin Wagner The New Dwelling: The Woman as Creator (1924) 461(1) Bruno Taut Rationalization in the Household (1926--1927) 462(3) Grete Lihotzky A Contemporary Garden City (1927) 465(1) Dr. N. The Weissenhof Settlement (1927) 466(2) Edgar Wedepohl A Construction, Not a Dwelling (1927) 468(1) Marie-Elisabeth Luders The Stuttgart Werkbund Houses (1929) 469(2) A Visit to a New Apartment (1929) 471(3) Otto Steinicke From Dada to the New Objectivity: Art and Politics 474(33) November Group Circular (1918) 477(1) November Group Manifesto (1918) 477(1) Work Council for Art Manifesto (1919) 478(1) Art at this Moment (1919-1920) 479(3) Wilhelm Hausenstein The German Philistine Gets Upset (1919) 482(1) Raoul Hausmann The Art Scab (1920) 483(3) John Heartfield George Grosz Dada Tours (1920) 486(1) Richard Huelsenbeck Creative Credo (1920) 487(2) Max Beckmann On the 1922 Russian Art Exhibition in Berlin (1922) 489(1) Adolf Behne Otto Dix (1923) 490(1) Carl Einstein Introduction to ``New Objectivity: German Painting since Expressionism (1925) 491(2) Gustav Hartlaub Post-Expressionist Schema (1925) 493(1) Franz Roh Magical Realism (1928) 494(2) Misch Orend Art and Race (1928) 496(3) Paul Schultze-Naumburg Among Other Things, a World for German Tradition (1931) 499(8) George Grosz CHANGING CONFIGURATIONS OF CULTURE Literature: High and Low 507(23) Franz Kafkas Posthumous Writings (1924) 510(2) Max Brod Thomas Manns Magic Mountain (1925) 512(1) Hermann von Wedderkop Preface to The Racing Reporter (1925) 512(1) Egon Erwin Kisch Filling Station (1928) 513(1) Walter Benjamin Ulysses by Joyce (1928) 514(1) Alfred Dolin Book Clubs (1929) 514(1) Erich Knauf The Woman in Modern Literature (1929) 515(2) Gina Kaus Prosaic Digression (1929) 517(1) Erich Kastner Masculine Literature (1929) 518(3) Kurt Pinthus Detective Novels (1929) 521(1) Heinrich Mann Is There a Newspaper Novel? (1929) 522(1) Arnold Zweig The New Literary Season (1931) 522(3) Gottfried Benn Champagne: Notes on the Literature of High Society (1931) 525(1) Friedrich Sieburg The Novel of Today Is International (1932) 526(2) Lion Feuchtwanger Remarks on Lyric Poetry (1932) 528(2) Gunter Eich Theater, Politics, and the Public Sphere 530(21) To the Directors of the German Theater (1918) 533(1) Leopold Jessner Theater---and Revolution? (1919) 533(1) Siegfried Jacobsohn Wilhelm Tell (1919) 534(1) Siegfried Jacobsohn The Dramatist Bert Brecht (1922) 534(1) Herbert Jhering The Drama and the National Idea (1922) 535(1) Hanns Johst More Good Sports (1926) 536(2) Bertolt Brecht Bertolt Brecht, and Fritz Kortner, Is the Drama Dying? (1926) 538(1) Leopold Jessner Difficulties of the Epic Theater (1927) 539(1) Bertolt Brecht Bertolt Brecht Presented to the British (1928) 540(2) Lion Feuchtwanger The Stage and Life (1929) 542(1) Friedrich Wolf The Documentary Play (1929) 543(3) Erwin Piscator On Actors (1930) 546(2) Max Reinhardt How Does One Use Agitprop Theater? (1930) 548(1) Das Rote Sprachrohr Measures Taken at the GroBes Schauspielhaus (1931) 549(2) Alfred Kemenyi The Roaring Twenties: Cabaret and Urban Entertaiment 551(17) Jazz Band (1922) 554(1) Alice Gerstel Berlin Revues (1924) 555(1) Frank Warschauer Our Show (1924) 556(1) Maximilian Sladek The Flight of the ``Blue Bird (1924) 557(1) Ferdinand Hager Charleston: Every Age Has the Dance It Deserves (1926) 558(1) Katharina Rathaus The Negroes Are Conquering Europe (1926) 559(1) Ivan Goll Around the Gedachtniskirche (1928) 560(2) Joseph Goebbels The Cabaret of the Nameless (1929) 562(1) Erich Kastner We Will Show You Berlin (1930) 563(2) Curt Moreck Girls and Crisis (1931) 565(1) Siegfried Kracauer Cabaret (1932) 566(2) Friedrich Hollaender Music for Use: Gebrauchsmusik and Opera 568(26) Jazz: On Whitemans Berlin Concerts (1926) 571(1) Frank Warschauer Zeitoper (1928) 572(2) Kurt Weill Short Operas (1928) 574(2) H. H. Stuckenschmidt Correspondence about The Threepenny Opera (1929) 576(2) Kurt Weill For the Renewal of Opera (1929) 578(1) Paul Hindemith Walter Gropoius Music for Use (1929) 579(4) Hanns Gutman On My Wozzeck (1929) 583(1) Alban Berg My Public (1930) 584(2) Arnold Schoenberg New Humanity and Old Objectivity (1931) 586(2) Ernst Krenek Mahagonny (1932) 588(6) Theodor W. Adorno New Mass Media: Radio and Gramophone 594(23) Dance Music (1926) 597(1) Kurt Weill Mechanical Music (1926) 597(3) H. H. Struckenschmidt Broadcast Literature (1927) 600(3) Otto Alfred Palitzsch Radio Censorship (1928) 603(2) Kurt Tucholsky The Curves of the Needle (1928) 605(2) Theodor W. Adorno The Future of Opera of the Radio (1929) 607(2) Frank Warschauer Art and Politics in Radio (1929) 609(1) Arno Schirokauer Radio Play or Literature? (1929) 610(2) Arnolt Bronnen The Writer Speaks and Sings on Gramophone Records (1929) 612(1) W. E. The End of the Private Sphere (1930) 613(2) M. M. Gehrke Rudolf Arnheim The Radio as an Apparatus of Communication (1932) 615(2) Bertolt Brecht Cinema from Expressionism to Social Realism 617(24) An Expressionist Film (1920) 620(1) Herbert Jhering Fridericus Rex (1923) 621(1) Curt Rosenberg The Future of the Feature Film in Germany (1926) 622(1) Fritz Lang Metropolis (1927) 623(3) Willy Haas A Discussion of Russian Filmic Art and Collectivist Art in General (1927) 626(2) Walter Benjamin Writers and Film (1929) 628(1) Bela Balazs Romanticizing the Criminal in Film (1929) 629(1) Emil Jannings The Blue Angel (1930) 630(2) Siegfried Kracauer Writers and the Sound Film (1931) 632(1) Erich Pommer Fritz Langs M: Filmed Sadism (1931) 632(2) Gabriele Tergit The Task of the Film Critic (1932) 634(7) Siegfried Kracauer THE TRANSFORMATION OF EVERYDAY LIFE Visual Culture: Illustrated Press and Photography 641(14) The Magazine as a Sign of the Times (1925) 644(1) Edlef Koppen Remarks on My Exhibition at the Cologne Art Union (1927) 645(1) August Sander The Illustrated Magazine (1927) 646(1) Kurt Korff Joy before the Object (1928) 647(1) Albert Renger-Patzsch Stop Reading! Look! (1928) 648(1) Johannes Molzahn Foreword to Here Comes the New Photographer! (1929) 649(1) Werner Graff Photography in Advertising (1930) 650(1) Willi Warstat Photomontage (1931) 651(2) Raul Hausmann Photomontage as a Weapon in Class Struggle (1932) 653(2) Alfred Kemenyi Visions of Plenty: Mass Consumption, Fashion, and Advertising 655(18) Boycott of French Fashion Goods (1923) 658(1) Enough is Enough! Against the Masculinization of Woman (1925) 659(1) Women as Shoppers (1926) 660(2) Hanns Kropff The Hour of Chewing Gum (1926) 662(1) Ernst Lorsy The Literature of Nonreaders (1926) 663(1) Hans Siemsen People of Today (1927) 664(3) Vicki Baum Editorial Statement (1928) 667(1) Auto-Magazin Sex Appeal: A New Catchword for an Old Thing (1928) 667(1) Anita Art and Advertising (1929) 668(2) Wolf Zucker On Fashion (1929) 670(1) Franz Hessel Whose Fault Is the Long Dress? (1931) 671(1) Stephanie Kaul Wasted Evenings (1932) 672(1) Liselotte de Booy (Miss Germany 1932) The Cult of the Body: Lebensreform, Sports, and Dance 673(20) The Truth about the Berlin Nudist Groups (1924) 676(1) Adolf Koch Ways to Strength and Beauty (1924) 677(1) Felix Hollaender Man and Sunlight (1925) 678(1) Hans Suren Flying Man (1926) 679(2) Artur Michel Sport is the Will to Culture (1926) 681(2) Fritz Wildung Physical Fitness---A National Necessity (1926) 683(1) Ernst Preiss Body Sense: Gymnastics, Dance, Sport (1927) 683(2) Wolfgang Graseser Dance and Gymanastics (1927) 685(2) Mary Wigman Boxing (1927) 687(1) Herbert Jhering The Athletic Spirit and Contemporary Art: An Essay on the Modern Type (1929) 688(2) Marieluise Fleisser Dancing (1931) 690(1) Valeska Gert The German Academy for Gymnastics (1932) 691(2) Carl Diem Sexuality: Private Rights versus Social Norms 693(25) The Law and Sexual Minorities (1921) 696(1) Kurt Hiller Guidelines of the German Association for the Protection of Mothers (1922) 697(1) The Erotic Revolution (1924) 698(2) Hugo Bettauer Sexual Catastrophes (1926) 700(2) Magnus Hirschfeld The Companionate Marriage (1929) 702(2) Lola Landau Appeal to All Homosexual Women (1929) 704(1) League for Human Rights Marriage as a Psychological Problem (1929) 705(3) Helene Stocker The Development and Scope of Sexology (1929) 708(2) Magnus Hirschfeld A Call for Sexual Tolerance (1930) 710(2) Grete Ujhely Sexuality as Sport (1931) 712(2) Alfred Doblin Rohm (1932) 714(1) Kurt Tucholsky Birth Control--A Mans Business! (1932) 715(3) Walter von Hollander On the Margins of the Law: Vice, Crime, and the Social Order 718(25) Berlin Is Becoming a Whore (1920) 721(2) Thomas Wehrling Cocaineism (1921) 723(1) Carl Ludwig Schleich Night Figures of the City (1926) 724(2) Ernst Engelbrecht Leo Heller Opium Dens (1926) 726(2) Ernst Engelbrecht Leo Heller Prostitution (1926) 728(1) Margot Klages-Stange The Murderer and the State (1928) 729(3) E. M. Mungenast The Berlin Underworld (1929) 732(2) Artur Landsberger The Criminal and His Judges (1929) 734(2) Franz Alexander Hugo Staub Sites of Berlin Prostitution (1930) 736(1) Willi Proger We Prisoners: Memories of Inmate No. 2911 (1931) 737(1) Georg Fuchs Responses to Fuchs, We Prisoner (1931) 738(2) Sigmund Freud Oswald Spengler Murder Trials and Society (1931) 740(3) Siegfried Kracauer Biographies 743(22) Political Chronology 765(8) Selected Bibliography 773(16) Acknowledgments 789(6) Index 795
Anton Kaes is Professor of German and Director of Film Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. He is author most recently of From Hitler to Heimat: The Return of History as Film (1989). Martin Jay is Sidney Hellman Ehrman Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley. His books include Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-Century French Thought (California, 1993). Edward Dimendberg is Assistant Professor of German Studies, Film and Video Studies, and Architecture at the University of Michigan.