Ulenspiegel

This article is about the defunct postwar German satirical magazine. For the contemporary German humor and satirical magazine, see Eulenspiegel (magazine).
Ulenspiegel

Magazine cover: Ulenspiegel

First issue of Ulenspiegel
Categories Satire
Frequency Bi-weekly
Publisher Herbert Sandberg,
Günther Weisenborn
Year founded 1945
First issue 24 December 1945 (1945-12-24)
Final issue August 1950
Company Ulenspiegel-Verlag
Country Germany
Based in Berlin
Language German

Ulenspiegel was a bi-weekly German satirical magazine published in Berlin after World War II. The magazine was an important cultural outlet in the new era of democracy and freedom following the fall of the Third Reich. Its first issue was published on 24 December 1945. The publishers were Herbert Sandberg and Günther Weisenborn; editors included Wolfgang Weyrauch, with Karl Schnog becoming editor-in-chief in 1947. Its success was stymied by politics, as the editors first clashed with the American authorities in occupied Germany in 1948, accused of being too "left-wing", and then after the magazine moved to the Soviet sector of Berlin, ran afoul of the Communists in 1950. The remaining publisher, Sandberg, lost his license to publish in 1950.

Satirical name

Ulenspiegel was a leftist-oriented political satire magazine in the tradition of Simplicissimus and other classic humor and satire publications and was a precursor of later magazines, such as Pardon, Titanic, and Eulenspiegel.[note 1] Called "one of the most important satirical journals of the postwar period",[1] it was named after Till Eulenspiegel, a popular jester and hero from German folklore. His name is both innocuous and indicative of his character. In High German, Eulenspiegel means "owl mirror", but he respected no authority and played practical jokes,[2] thus acting out the Plattdeutsch version of his name: ulen, "to sweep" or "clean", and Spiegel, which is hunter's jargon for "hind parts" or "backside", so that in the original Plattdeutsch, his surname means "wipe my ass", in essence, "kiss my ass".[3]

During the postwar period, a number of Kabaretts opened in Germany, including the important Cabaret Ulenspiegel during 1946 in what later became West Berlin.[4]

History

Foundation

In June 1945, Herbert Sandberg, newly liberated from Buchenwald concentration camp, and playwright and literary critic Günter Weisenborn,[1] newly freed from Zuchthaus Luckau, met on the Kurfürstendamm. Sandberg had a finished comp of a satirical magazine with him. Emil Carlebach, who had been Sandberg's Blockältester [5] at Buchenwald and had been granted a license as editor for the Frankfurter Rundschau [1] introduced Sandberg to officials at the Information Control Division (ICD).[6] Peter de Mendelssohn, who was responsible for establishing the first American sector newspaper,[7] at the Office of Military Government, United States (OMGUS), and Carlebach acted as founding sponsors. The publishing information from a 1946 masthead makes the intent and purpose clear: "The independent and uncensored ULENSPIEGEL is published every other Friday by Ulenspiegel Verlag Haueisen & Co. G.m.b.H. Berlin-Dahlem Pücklerstr. 22... The Ulenspiegel Verlag is accredited by the Information Control Division of the American Military Government."

Sandberg and Weisenborn became the publishers.[8] Wolfgang Weyrauch became an editor in 1945[9] or 1946.[10] Karl Schnog became editor-in-chief in 1947.[11]

Postwar freedom

In the early days of the postwar era, Ulenspiegel was a forum for writers, illustrators, caricaturists, and graphic artists of various cultural and political orientation, where they could freely satirize, comment on, and join in the political, cultural, and economic development of Germany.[8] For example, Weisenborn was a member of the Social Democratic Party and Sandberg, a Communist.[1] In their journal, satire, humor, cartoons, and caricature played a special role, with artwork by Alfred Kubin, Karl Hofer, and Max Pechstein among others.[12] They also supported the re-discovery of avant-garde artists, who had been ostracized, their work smeared as degenerate, reproducing works by Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, and other artists, both past and contemporary, who had been banned under the Third Reich.[1]

Ulenspiegel took a strong anti-Nazi position, portraying Nazi concentration camps and crimes in its artwork, and declaring the complicity of the German people.[1] By 1948, however, with the United States and the Soviet Union becoming more antagonistic, the journal began to portray them as two giants battling for domination of Germany and the world. It described denazification as a half-hearted, failed exercise, and mockingly criticized the German-American partnership as an unequal and unholy alliance between ex-Nazis and dollar-wielding Americans.[13] Ulenspiegel—like no other magazine in postwar Germany—symbolized the democratic, anti-fascist new era,[1] a burst of optimism before the polarization of the cold war and the division of Germany. Many of Ulenspiegel's contributors influenced the cultural face of both East and West Germany.

Cold war and closure

From the early postwar days until the cold war and division of Germany, the editorial meetings of the satirical magazine brought together those who had survived Nazi Germany. Artists, writers, exiles, editors, and graphic designers met and had heated discussions about the present and future of Germany. The publishers were able to help some people acquire a Persilschein. This was the denazification certificate [14] one needed to receive a work permit.

In October 1947, OMGUS began to directly counter Soviet propaganda with its "Operation Talk Back", using the mass media to relay its message and bringing Ulenspiegel into direct conflict with the Americans over its criticism of their policies in Germany.[13] In an attempt to censor and punish Ulenspiegel for its editorial positions, OMGUS cut the magazine's paper allotment by one-half [13] and began to look for new editors.[6] An internal ICD memo clearly delineates the motive. "Orders have been issued to reduce by one-half the paper allocation given to the magazine Ulenspiegel as a preliminary step toward inducing a change in editorial orientation of this magazine or its replacement with a more effective medium."[13] The result was a significant drop in circulation.[13] When Ulenspiegel first began publishing, circulation was 120,000; later it dropped to 50,000, although it later recovered somewhat to 75,000. From December 24, 1945 to the tenth 1948 issue, the magazine appeared under license by the American military; from April 1948 to 1950, it was under license by the Soviet occupational force.[15]

In July 1948, Weisenborn left Ulenspiegel and Berlin, moving to Hamburg.[6] The cold war was intensifying; the Americans had instituted a currency reform and the Berlin blockade was on. Sandberg returned his license to the Americans,[6] accepted an offer from the Soviet Military Administration in Germany, and moved to East Berlin in 1948.

Fuffzehn für Vergnügte und Verärgerte, edited by Lothar Kusche[16] was also a satirical weekly magazine briefly published by Ulenspiegel Verlag in 1949.[17] Just 20 issues were printed. The company also published a few books.

Ulenspiegel continued to appear, censored by the Soviets,[6] until August 1950, when its publishing license was rescinded for being too modern and "lacking a basis in the Masses".[18][19] A competitor in the Soviet sector, the magazine Frischer Wind, licensed to publish in 1947,[15][20] "better understood that the Party [was] always right—and [had] no sense of humor".[21] Renamed Eulenspiegel in 1954,[21] it continues to publish today in Berlin.

Ulenspiegel's contributors

See also

Sources

Footnotes

  1. The first magazine called Ulenspiegel was unrelated to the postwar satirical journal; it was the in-house magazine of the German publishing house Ullstein Verlag, published from 1934 to 1941.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Giles Scott-Smith, Hans Krabbendam, The cultural Cold War in Western Europe, 1945-1960 Frank Cass Publishers (2003), pp. 29496.
  2. Cora Sol Goldstein, Capturing the German eye: American visual propaganda in occupied Germany The University of Chicago Press (2009), p. 167, footnote 19. ISBN 0-226-30169-9
  3. "Till Eulenspiegel" eulenwelt.de Retrieved January 23, 2012 (German)
  4. Wolf-Eckhard Gudemann, Ich sag dir alles Wissen Media Verlag GmbH, Gütersloh/Munich (2007), p. 713. ISBN 978-3-577-10292-6 (German)
  5. Sandberg, Kunert (1978) p. 5 (German)
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Cora Sol Goldstein, "The Ulenspiegel and anti-American discourse in the American sector of Berlin", German Politics and Society (22 June 2005). at Highbeam. Retrieved 24 January 2012
  7. Wolfgang Schivelbusch, In a Cold Crater: Cultural and Intellectual Life in Berlin, 1945–1948 University of California Press (1998), p. 155. Retrieved 7 February 2012
  8. 1 2 Herbert Sandberg biography Herbert-Sandberg.de Retrieved 21 January 2012 (German)
  9. Darmstadt, Literaturland Hessen, HR2 Kultur, Hessischer Rundfunk (German)
  10. "Weyrauch, Wolfgang," Jean Albert Bédé and William Benbow Edgerton, eds., Columbia Dictionary of Modern European Literature, New York: Columbia University, 1980, ISBN 978-0-231-03717-4, p. 870.
  11. Günter Jordan and Ralf Schenk, eds., Schwarzweiss und Farbe: DEFA-Dokumentarfilme 194692 Berlin: Filmmuseum Potsdam & Jovis, 1996, ISBN 978-3-931321-51-2, p. 45 (German)
  12. Gestorben: Herbert Sandberg Der Spiegel (1 April 1991). Retrieved 7 February 2012 (German)
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 Scott-Smith, Krabbendam (2003) p. 295
  14. Peter Duignan, Lewis H. Gann, The rebirth of the West: the Americanization of the democratic world, 1945-1958 Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. (1996), p. 587. ISBN 0-8476-8198-X Retrieved 7 February 2012
  15. 1 2 Sylvia Klötzer, Satire und Macht: Film, Zeitung, Kabarett in der DDR, Zeithistorische Studien 30, Cologne: Böhlau, 2006, ISBN 978-3-412-15005-1, p. 24 and notes 19, 20.
  16. "Buchpremiere Lothar Kusche "Ich bin tot, und das kam so" am 19.03.2009" Berlin-Pankow press release (20 February 2009). Retrieved 23 January 2012 (German)
  17. Klötzer, p. 25.
  18. Cora Goldstein, "Permissiveness and Censorship in Occupied Germany: The Ulenspiegel Case" (Abstract) University of Hull, Scarborough Campus (24-25 August 2004). Retrieved 7 February 2012
  19. Frank Wilhelm, Literarische Satire in der SBZ/DDR 1945-1961: Autoren, institutionelle Rahmenbedingungen und kulturpolitische Leitlinien, Poetica 30, Hamburg: Kovač, 1998, ISBN 978-3-86064-709-7, p. 69 (German)
  20. Goldstein (2009), p. 168
  21. 1 2 Peter Dittmar, "Uncle Sam teilt Bonbons aus" Die Welt (31 May 2007). Retrieved 7 February 2012 (German)
  22. "Der Dichter Günter Kunert wird 80" OE1, ÖRF, March 1, 2009 (German)
  23. "Nachruf: Christa ReinigIch träume von meiner Verkommenheit" Tagesspiegel 7 October 2008 (German)
  24. "Lakonische Lyrikerin: Christa Reinig ist tot" Der Spiegel 6 October 2008 (German)
  25. Ulenspiegel-Kalender German National Library. Retrieved 23 January 2012 (German)
  26. Zwischen Krieg und Frieden German National Library. Retrieved January 23, 2012. ISBN 3-88520-048-1 (German)

External links

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