Loading...

Carpe Mundum

German Youth Culture of the Weimar Republic

by Luke Springman (Author)
©2007 Monographs 306 Pages

Summary

Carpe Mundum analyzes German Youth culture during the Weimar Republic (1918-1933). Each chapter addresses a distinct topic: sex educational materials for young people, the language of the censorship debates, novels dealing with war, historical narration, magazines, popular science and science fiction, radio, and sports. Together the themes illustrate the influence of nineteenth-century holistic thinking in popular culture in early twentieth-century Germany. Public policies and institutions governing German youth culture during the Weimar Republic, including education and social welfare, evince spiritual underpinnings of Naturphilosophie – a movement which promoted the unity of all things. As cultural modernity in Germany enabled young people greater participation in shaping their culture, elements of a modernity of youth emerged as distinct from that of the adult world and its ideologically laden system of values. The essence of youthful modernity in Germany as evident most clearly in popular magazines, radio, and sports rests primarily on spontaneity, ingenuity and camaraderie.

Details

Pages
306
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631562444
Language
English
Keywords
Weimarer Republik Jugendliteratur Jugendkultur Deutsch History of sex education in Germany German war novels for young people German popular magazines for young people Censorship and youth in Germany
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. 306 pp., 25 b/w fig., 8 col. fig.

Biographical notes

Luke Springman (Author)

The Author: Luke Springman is an Associate Professor at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania.

Previous

Title: Carpe Mundum