Twelve Theses Explained
The Twelve Theses were issued in early April 1933 by Press and Propaganda Section[1] of the German Student Union and called for German university students to purge the German language and literature of Jewish influence and to restore those aspects of German culture to their "pure" volkische traditions. The theses were posted on university campuses throughout Germany prior to the May 1933 book burnings.[1]
Text
The English text of the theses (as those are posted to the right) reads as follows:[2]
Commentary
- While the theses targeted the "Jewish spirit" (jüdischer Geist) and books expressing this, it also attacked concepts that were "un-German" (undeutsch). It is not clear from the theses themselves whether this term is intended to be synonymous with "Jewishness".
- The theses do not themselves expressly call for book burning.
- Thesis 1 expressly implies that there should be no foreign literature in Germany, entailing a complete ban of all non-German literature,[3] at least on works translated into German.
- Theses 11 and 12 would reserve German universities exclusively to German students and professors, devoid of foreign elements.[3]
See also
Footnotes
- This section was also founded in early April and the issuance of the theses was its first action. Levy p. 79.
- The theses appeared in the Volkischer Beobachter of 14 April 1933.
- Ritchie p. 67.
References
- Book: Levy, Richard S.. Antisemitism: A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution. ABC-CLIO. 2005 . 1-85109-439-3.
- Book: Ritchie, J.M.. German Literature Under National Socialism. Taylor & Francis. 1983. 0-389-20418-8. registration.