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What I read in Nazi Germany?

German writer Karl May was the favorite writer of the dictator Adolf Hitler and a manual for walking without clothes was one of the great bestsellers of Nazi Germany.
For Hitler's dictatorship, the destruction of culture, the ideology of the Aryan race and the entertainment would necessarily reach. But what were the books read more Germans between 1933 and 1945? A study addressed first to answer this question poorly analyzed.

Book burning organized by the Nazis on May 10, 1933 in Berlin.

To carry out its investigation "Lesen unter Hitler - Author, Bestseller, Leser im Dritten Reich" (in Castilian: "Reading under Hitler. Authors, bestsellers, readers in the Third Reich), Christian Adam studied Quema de libros organizada por los nazis el 10 de mayo de 1933 en Berlín. a 350 titles and analyzed their occurrence and impact. Adam considered it a bestseller that book at that time achieved at least a circulation of 100,000 copies. Analyzed all genres: novels, essays, reference books, war or atlas. The history books of Nazism is "antagonistic piece of history burned works," according to the study published by Galiani Berlin. Along absolute leader, "Mein Kampf" ("My Struggle"), with a circulation of 12.5 million copies in the living rooms and German libraries accumulated other works as "The Prince" by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (135,000 copies), "Gone with the Wind" (366,000) of the American Margaret Mitchell or "The German mother and her first child, Johanna Haar. Combination

officials and bureaucrats chaotic

Hitler's literary policy, unlike what is normally thought, did not leave a single source but a chaotic union officials and bureaucrats. In no other aspect of Nazi policy such confusion and disorder reigned.

The party leadership, the Ministry of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels, the Department of Nazi ideologist Alfred Rosenberg, everyone wanted to get their hands and decide who had the right to publish what and who is not.

Joseph Goebbels: "light literature to the masses."

The scheme had at least 20 posts of censorship, blacklisting and recommendations. For Rosenberg, head of the territories occupied by Germany during World War II (1939-45), the literature of entertainment was a poison. On the contrary, to Goebbels easy readings were a good safety valve in the context of increasingly certain defeat in the war. Joseph Goebbels: Due to this lack of agreement, many publishers and authors were able to grow with or without help from the state apparatus and how did the house Bertelsmann, lay the foundation for business success since 1945. Reference books and popularize Some of the most important reference books were which dealt with discovery or extraction of raw materials as "Anilin" ("aniline"), Aloys Karl Schenzinger, which sold over a million copies and that after the war was still a success.

Cartel

a Karl May Festival, organized in 1938 and 1939 in the town of Rathen, northern Germany.

Titles such as "Blockade Erfinder Brechen die (" Inventors break the blockade "), with 400,000 copies, or" Robert Koch. Grossen Roman eines Lebens "(" Robert Koch. Novela a great life "), with 135,000 specimens, found enthusiastic readers among the soldiers. Cartel de un Festival Karl May, organizado en 1938 y 1939 en la localidad de Rathen, norte de Alemania. Another of the most successful and certainly one of the most curious was "Mensch und Sonne. Arisch-Olympischer Geist" ("Man and the sun. The Olympic spirit Aryan"), with tips for hiking naked, bathing clay or skiing without clothes. Managed to sell 235,000 copies in an ode to the race, the German body and sexual freedom. Source: http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,, 5931792.00. Html

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