Völkischer Beobachter: Difference between revisions
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Its first publisher was [[Dietrich Eckhart]], who died shortly after being freed from prison in 1923. [[Max Ammann]], an early Nazi, became the party's business manager and head of its publishing house, and the following year, Eher Verlagtook took control of the newspaper. He became president of the Reich Association of German Newspaper Publishers, establishing Nazi control over the industry, and reaping very large financial rewards. | Its first publisher was [[Dietrich Eckhart]], who died shortly after being freed from prison in 1923. [[Max Ammann]], an early Nazi, became the party's business manager and head of its publishing house, and the following year, Eher Verlagtook took control of the newspaper. He became president of the Reich Association of German Newspaper Publishers, establishing Nazi control over the industry, and reaping very large financial rewards. | ||
There were additional specialized and often more | There were additional specialized and often more propagandist Nazi newspapers, such as ''[[Der Stürmer]]'', [[Julius Streicher]]'s especially [[antisemitism|antisemitic]] and sensationalist publication, and ''[[Das Schwarze Korps]]'', the weekly organ of the [[SS]]. |
Revision as of 19:34, 19 December 2010
In Nazi Germany, the main Party-endorsed newspaper was the Völkischer Beobachter. The title is usually translated as “People’s Observer”, because völkisch is derived from Volk, the German word for 'people' (which, however, can also mean 'nation', 'tribe', or 'race'). Neither this translation nor the sometimes used 'racialist' or 'folkish' are satisfactory because they do not convey the implied mystical quality.
Its first publisher was Dietrich Eckhart, who died shortly after being freed from prison in 1923. Max Ammann, an early Nazi, became the party's business manager and head of its publishing house, and the following year, Eher Verlagtook took control of the newspaper. He became president of the Reich Association of German Newspaper Publishers, establishing Nazi control over the industry, and reaping very large financial rewards.
There were additional specialized and often more propagandist Nazi newspapers, such as Der Stürmer, Julius Streicher's especially antisemitic and sensationalist publication, and Das Schwarze Korps, the weekly organ of the SS.