Erich Julian Wollenberg Memoirs

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Erich Julian Wollenberg Memoirs http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4r29r6h6 No online items Overview of the Erich Julian Wollenberg memoirs Finding aid prepared by Hoover Institution Library and Archives Staff Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2009 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Overview of the Erich Julian 78100 1 Wollenberg memoirs Title: Erich Julian Wollenberg memoirs Date (inclusive): undated Collection Number: 78100 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: German Physical Description: 1 item (776 p.) (1 manuscript box, 1 phonotape reel)(0.5 Linear Feet) Abstract: Relates to the Bavarian Soviet Republic of 1919, the development of the German communist movement to 1933, activities of the Communist International, and the development of communism in the Soviet Union to 1933. Photocopy. Hoover Institution Library & Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights No more than 500 words may be quoted. For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives in 1978. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Erich Julian Wollenberg memoirs, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Biographical/Historical Note German communist leader and journalist. Scope and Content of Collection Relates to the Bavarian Soviet Republic of 1919, the development of the German communist movement to 1933, activities of the Communist International, and the development of communism in the Soviet Union to 1933. Photocopy. Subjects and Indexing Terms Audiotapes Germany -- History -- Revolution, 1918 Communism -- Germany Communism -- Germany -- Bavaria Soviet Union -- Politics and government -- 1917-1936 Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands Communist International Overview of the Erich Julian 78100 2 Wollenberg memoirs.
Recommended publications
  • Douglas Peifer on Munich 1919: Diary of a Revolution
    Victor Klemperer. Munich 1919: Diary of a Revolution. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2017. 220 pp. $25.00, cloth, ISBN 978-1-5095-1058-0. Reviewed by Douglas Peifer Published on H-War (December, 2017) Commissioned by Margaret Sankey (Air University) Victor Klemperer’s diary created quite a stir came an increasingly desperate struggle. Translat‐ when frst published in Germany in 1995. Klem‐ ed into English in 1998/99, his frst-person reflec‐ perer’s diary entries for the period 1933-45 have tions of life in the Third Reich have been used ex‐ been used extensively by scholars of the Third Re‐ tensively by scholars such as Richad J. Evans, Saul ich and the Holocaust to illustrate how Nazi ideol‐ Friedländer, and Omer Bartov.[1] ogy and racial policies affected even thoroughly Klemperer’s Munich 1919: Diary of a Revolu‐ assimilated, converted Jews. Klemperer, the son tion provides a remarkable eyewitness account of of a rabbi, was born in Wilhelmine Germany. His an earlier crisis in German history, one connected education, professional development, and life to the Third Reich by the myths and memories choices were thoroughly bourgeois, with Klem‐ that ideologues on the far right exploited through‐ perer’s conversion to Protestantism signaling his out the Weimar era. Two days before the abdica‐ self-identification with German culture and his tion of Kaiser Wilhelm II and the declaration of a desire to assimilate. Klemperer attended Gymna‐ German Republic in Berlin on November 9, 1918, sium in Berlin and Landsberg on the Warthe, worker and soldier councils in Munich toppled studied German and Romance philology in Mu‐ the 738-year Wittelsbach dynasty in Bavaria.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Bradford Ethesis
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Bradford Scholars University of Bradford eThesis This thesis is hosted in Bradford Scholars – The University of Bradford Open Access repository. Visit the repository for full metadata or to contact the repository team © University of Bradford. This work is licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence. THE WHITE INTERNATIONAL: ANATOMY OF A TRANSNATIONAL RADICAL REVISIONIST PLOT IN CENTRAL EUROPE AFTER WORLD WAR I Nicholas Alforde Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Social and International Studies University of Bradford 2013 Principal Supervisor: Gábor Bátonyi, DPhil Abstract Nicholas Alforde The White International: Anatomy of a Transnational Radical Revisionist Plot in Central Europe after World War I Keywords: Bauer, Gömbös, Horthy, Ludendorff, Orgesch, paramilitary, Prónay, revision, Versailles, von Kahr The denial of defeat, the harsh Versailles Treaty and unsuccessful attempts by paramilitary units to recover losses in the Baltic produced in post-war Germany an anti- Bolshevik, anti-Entente, radical right-wing cabal of officers with General Ludendorff and Colonel Bauer at its core. Mistakenly citing a lack of breadth as one of the reason for the failure of their amateurishly executed Hohenzollern restoration and Kapp Putsch schemes, Bauer and co-conspirator Ignatius Trebitsch-Lincoln devised the highly ambitious White International plot. It sought to form a transnational league of Bavaria, Austria and Hungary to force the annulment of the Paris Treaties by the coordinated use of paramilitary units from the war vanquished nations. It set as its goals the destruction of Bolshevism in all its guises throughout Europe, the restoration of the monarchy in Russia, the systematic elimination of all Entente-sponsored Successor States and the declaration of war on the Entente.
    [Show full text]
  • Soviet”: from Bolshevik Utopia to Soviet Modernity
    Introduction Countercultures Ideologies and Practices Alternative Visions A HISTORY OF THE “SOVIET”: FROM BOLSHEVIK UTOPIA TO SOVIET MODERNITY Anna Krylova Introduction: Crossing out “Proletarian,” Writing “Soviet”1 In early 1936,Aleksandr Kosarev, the thirty-three-year-old leader of the All-Union Young Communist League (Komsomol), and his Central Committee worked away on a draft of the organiza- tion’s new membership rules. The draft was forwarded directly to Joseph Stalin, who must have spent hours hand-editing the lengthy document. The resulting document was cleansed of what most scholars today would associate with the signature Bolshevik lingua franca of the socialist project undertaken in the Soviet Union. Stalin consistently crossed out the familiar Bolshevik terms, categories, and metaphors that Kosarev had copied from the old rules. Stalin wrote “nonaffi liated” in place of “proletarian” and “laboring” in place of “class conscious.”2 Two months later, at the Komsomol Congress that gathered to adopt the new mem- bership rules, Stalin began to use the term “Soviet” to refer to these “party-less” and “laboring” young people. The toast with which he ended the Congress, “Long live the Soviet youth,” sounded like a definitive corrective to Kosarev and other weath- ered Komsomol leaders, who still preferred to refer to their 1 I am grateful to Social organization as the “young generation of the proletarian revolu- History for allowing me to draw on materials 3 tionaries.” published in Anna Krylova, “Imagining Socialism in the Soviet Century,” Social The odd but explicit opposition between the Bolshevik political History 42, no. 3 (2017): lingua franca and Stalin’s discursive intervention carried out under 315–41, in this essay, DOI: 10.1080/03071022 the rubric of the “Soviet” cannot help but give a scholar of modern .2017.1327640, reprinted Russia pause.
    [Show full text]
  • Diss Gradschool Submission
    OUTPOST OF FREEDOM: A GERMAN-AMERICAN NETWORK’S CAMPAIGN TO BRING COLD WAR DEMOCRACY TO WEST BERLIN, 1933-72 Scott H. Krause A dissertation submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History. Chapel Hill 2015 Approved by: Konrad H. Jarausch Christopher R. Browning Klaus W. Larres Susan Dabney Pennybacker Donald M. Reid Benjamin Waterhouse © 2015 Scott H. Krause ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT Scott H. Krause: Outpost of Freedom: A German-American Network’s Campaign to bring Cold War Democracy to West Berlin, 1933-66 (under the direction of Konrad H. Jarausch) This study explores Berlin’s sudden transformation from the capital of Nazi Germany to bastion of democracy in the Cold War. This project has unearthed how this remarkable development resulted from a transatlantic campaign by liberal American occupation officials, and returned émigrés, or remigrés, of the Marxist Social Democratic Party (SPD). This informal network derived from members of “Neu Beginnen” in American exile. Concentrated in wartime Manhattan, their identity as German socialists remained remarkably durable despite the Nazi persecution they faced and their often-Jewish background. Through their experiences in New Deal America, these self-professed “revolutionary socialists” came to emphasize “anti- totalitarianism,” making them suspicious of Stalinism. Serving in the OSS, leftists such as Hans Hirschfeld forged friendships with American left-wing liberals. These experiences connected a wider network of remigrés and occupiers by forming an epistemic community in postwar Berlin. They recast Berlin’s ruins as “Outpost of Freedom” in the Cold War.
    [Show full text]
  • The German Army and Politics, 1918-1923
    University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies The Vault: Electronic Theses and Dissertations 2015-09-11 Republic of Violence: The German Army and Politics, 1918-1923 Bucholtz, Matthew N Bucholtz, M. N. (2015). Republic of Violence: The German Army and Politics, 1918-1923 (Unpublished doctoral thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/27638 http://hdl.handle.net/11023/2451 doctoral thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY Republic of Violence: The German Army and Politics, 1918-1923 By Matthew N. Bucholtz A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN HISTORY CALGARY, ALBERTA SEPTEMBER, 2015 © Matthew Bucholtz 2015 Abstract November 1918 did not bring peace to Germany. Although the First World War was over, Germany began a new and violent chapter as an outbreak of civil war threatened to tear the country apart. The birth of the Weimar Republic, Germany’s first democratic government, did not begin smoothly as republican institutions failed to re-establish centralized political and military authority in the wake of the collapse of the imperial regime. Coupled with painful aftershocks from defeat in the Great War, the immediate postwar era had only one consistent force shaping and guiding political and cultural life: violence.
    [Show full text]
  • Lenin Included in Volumes 26-31 of This Edition
    W O R K E R S O F A L L C O U N T R I E S , U N I T E! L E N I N COLLECTED WORKS 44 A THE RUSSIAN EDITION WAS PRINTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH A DECISION OF THE NINTH CONGRESS OF THE R.C.P.(B.) AND THE SECOND CONGRESS OF SOVIETS OF THE U.S.S.R. ИНCTИTУT МАРÇCИзМА — ЛЕНИНИзМА пpи ЦK KНCC B. n. l d H n H С О Ч И Н E Н И Я И з д a н u е ч е m в е p m o e ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОЕ ИЗДАТЕЛЬСТВО ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОЙ ЛИТЕРАТУРЫ M О С К В А V. I. L E N I N cOLLEcTED WORKS VOLUME 44 October 1o17–November 1o 20 PROGRESS PUBLISHERS MOSCOW TRANSLATED FROM THE RUSSIAN BY CLEMENS DUTT EDITED BY BERNARD ISAACS From Marx to Mao M L © Digital Reprints 2014 www.marx2mao.com First printing 1970 Second printing 1975 Third printing 1977 10102—213 л беэ объявл. 014 (01)—77 7 C O N T E N T S Page Preface ........................ 35 1917 1. INSTRUCTION TO THE RED GUARD STAFF. October 30 (November 1?) ................... 43 2. TO THE PETROGRAD COMMITTEE OF THE R.S.D.L.P.(B.). November ? (15) .................. 43 3. TO Y. M. SVERDLOV. Not earlier than November 8 (?1) . 44 4. TO THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION OF THE LABOUR PRESS OF AMERICA, FRANCE AND GREAT BRITAIN. November, prior to 10 (?3) ...... 44 5. TO MAJOR-GENERAL S. I. ODINTSOV. November 15 (?8).
    [Show full text]
  • Road to Revolution III, Table of Contents
    Road To Revolution III, Table of Contents Road to Revolution III from PL Magazine, Special Issue Vol. 8 No. 3 (November, 1971). Table of Contents Editorials (Not included in this Internet edition) ROAD TO REVOLUTION III is the third major attack on revisionism by the Progressive Labor Party. This summary article attempts to draw many lessons -- positive and negative -- from the practice of the international communist movement. Particularly under attack is the current right wing leadership of the Mao Tse-tung group in China. Another impoertant section deals with some of the errors of our party. It is our hope that we can learn from them and move the cause of the working class to socialism. THE GREAT PROLETARIAN CULTURAL REVOLUTION (GPCR) is analyzed to see why and how it was reversed. In this important piece an effort is made to understand the class forces at play. A serious try is made to sort out -- based on evidence -- the right from the left. In addition, the left and its efforts are dealt with in an attempt to prevent repetition of its mistakes by our party and all revolutionaries. This LETTER BY THE IRANIAN STUDENT ORGANIZATION indicates their revulsion at the invitation of the enemies of the Iranian people in China. The CCP is playing footsie with fascists all over the world and this letter indicates the growing disgust with Mao Tse-tung's policies. The STRATEGY AND TEACTICS OF THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNIST MOVEMENT since its inception are dealt with in this article. This herculean effort will certainly stir up thinking and controversy.
    [Show full text]
  • The Historical Lessons from the First Hungarian Workers' State (1919
    The Historical Lessons from the First Hungarian Workers’ State (1919) The Hungarian Soviet Republic (HSR), the first Hungarian workers’ state was established on 21 March 1919. It existed for 133 days. In August 1919 Romanian and French troops occupied Hungary. The workers’ state was destroyed and replaced by a Bourgeois government. The HSR’s place in history The Hungarian Soviet Republic was the first workers’ state in Europe established after the October Revolution of 1917. It could exist longer than the Bavarian Soviet Republic (6 April- 3 May 1919) or the Slovakian Soviet Republic (16 June-7 July 1919) so it was a more comprehensive experience of European socialism. Background Hungary became independent in 1867 in the frameworks of the Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy. Hungary participated in World War I on the side of Germany and lost the war. In November 1918 the Monarchy was dissolved. In November 1918 the Bourgeois revolution triumphed in Budapest. Hungary was declared a peoples’ republic.It was ruled by Bourgeoisand social-democrat politicians. The Hungarian ruling class faced three challenges. One: to normalize the economic situation after the war devastations. Two: to defend independence and territorial integrity against the winners of the war, like France, andthe newly born national countries, like Romania and Czechoslovakia. Three: to prevent the strengthening of communist forces and to avoid socialist revolution. The ruling class was not able to solve these problems. Lesson from the HSR Lenin’s idea about world revolution is a real possibility. The HSR demonstrated that socialism is not an exclusively Russian solution but a general program of triumphing over capitalism.
    [Show full text]
  • New Year Greetings from the Workers Party of Ireland to International Communist and Workers’ Parties
    New Year Greetings from the Workers Party of Ireland to International Communist and Workers’ Parties Dear Comrades, The Workers Party of Ireland sends comradely greetings and best wishes for 2019 to communist and workers’ parties throughout the world. Capitalism continues to condemn millions to poverty, unemployment, homelessness, inequality, oppression, exploitation, hunger and disease. Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism, with its specific features, including the concentration of production into monopolies and inter-imperialist rivalries in fierce competition with each other for resources, markets and trade routes, threatens the peace and security of the peoples of the world and leads to intervention and war. The working class has the ability to change this. Class remains the motive force for social change. Class struggle is the means through which the working class advances from a class “in itself” to a class “for itself,” as a necessary precondition for its own emancipation. The conditions for class struggle are ripe. The case for socialism remains timely and relevant. This year many important events will be remembered. The October Revolution brought about a social system which abolished private ownership of the means of production and affirmed social ownership as the basis for creating the conditions for a new way of life. In the aftermath of the October Revolution, on 21 March 1919, the Hungarian Soviet Republic was proclaimed. On 7 April, 1919 the Bavarian Soviet Republic was declared. In September 1919 the Communist Party of America convened in Chicago. In Ireland the “Democratic Programme” approved by the First Dáil Éireann (lower house of the Irish parliament) on 21 January 1919 was a progressive recognition of the rights of labour although much of the explicitly socialist content in the earlier draft was removed.
    [Show full text]
  • Urg 2018 Annual Report L Rosa Uxemb Stiftung
    2018 ANNUAL REPORT ROSA LUXEMBURG STIFTUNG ROSA-LUXEMBURG-STIFTUNG 2018 ANNUAL REPORT 2018 ANNUAL REPORT ROSA-LUXEMBURG-STIFTUNG 1 CONTENTS EDITORIAL 4 FOCUS: MARX2006 OntheShouldersofKarlMarx 6 MultimediaMarx—TheWebPortal 8 TheCongressMarx200: Politics—Theory—Socialism9 Marx200aroundGermany 10 K is for Karl—ASeriesofFilmsbyPaulMason 10 MarxforEveryone!—EducationalMaterialsforBeginners 11 AClassicinitsJubileeYear—CapitalReadingCoursesandthe11thAutumnSchool 12 ProjectsSupportedbytheRLSin2018asPartofMarx200 12 PublicationsRelatedtoMarx200 13 INSTITUTE FOR CRITICAL SOCIAL ANALYSIS 14 ConnectiveClassPolitics 15 Fellows 16 NewAuthoritarianismandtheRadicalRight 17 “WeAccuse!”—TheHealthcareSystemonTrial 18 LuxemburgLectures2018 20 THE ACADEMY FOR POLITICAL EDUCATION 22 TheCaseisNotClosed!—SentencingattheMunichNSUTrial 23 ShapingtheFuturethroughLeftistProfessionalDevelopment 23 LocalPolitics:ACrashCourse 24 IntheRight(s):InternationalMovementsforGlobalJustice 24 ASocietyofManyDifferentStrenghts 25 THE HISTORICAL CENTRE FOR DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISM 26 100YearsofRevolutioninGermany 27 1968:AGlobalAwakening 28 1938:TheYearBeforetheWar 29 THE RLS NETWORK ACROSS GERMANY 30 Baden-Württemberg:PoliticalAcademyforYoungActivists 32 Bavaria:TheBavarianRevolutionandtheBavarianSovietRepublicof1918/19 32 Berlin:TheRed-Red-GreenCoalitionanditsHousingPolicy:TakingStock 33 Brandenburg:StructuralTransformationinLusatia 33 Bremen:City/Data/Explosion 34 Hamburg:StrategiesforCombatingAnti-Feminism 34 Hesse:AuthoritarianismandResistanceinTurkey 35 Mecklenburg-Vorpommern:TheRoleoftheJudiciaryintheMunichNSUTrial
    [Show full text]
  • Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918-1919 in Postwar Munich
    Fairfield University DigitalCommons@Fairfield History Faculty Publications History Department 1997 Monuments and the Politics of Memory: Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918-1919 in Postwar Munich Gavriel D. Rosenfeld [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/history-facultypubs Copyright 1997 Cambridge University Press Peer Reviewed Repository Citation Rosenfeld, Gavriel D., "Monuments and the Politics of Memory: Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918-1919 in Postwar Munich" (1997). History Faculty Publications. 56. https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/history-facultypubs/56 Published Citation Rosenfeld, G. (1997) "Monuments and the Politics of Memory: Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918-1919 in Postwar Munich," Central European History, Volume 30, Nr. 2, 1997, pp. 221-251. This item has been accepted for inclusion in DigitalCommons@Fairfield by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Fairfield. It is brought to you by DigitalCommons@Fairfield with permission from the rights- holder(s) and is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses, you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Monuments and the Politics of Memory: Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918-1919 in Postwar Munich Gavriel D. Rosenfeld the turbulent nature of recent German history, studies of postwar German memory understandably have focused upon the GIVEN issue of Vergangenheitsbewaltigung?the difficult process of "coming to terms" with the historical experience of the Third Reich and the Sec? ond World War.
    [Show full text]
  • Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-19840-1 — Revolutionary World Edited by David Motadel Index More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-19840-1 — Revolutionary World Edited by David Motadel Index More Information Index ‘Al-Aynayn, Shaykh Ma, 113 Anfal Operation, 199 ‘Ali-Quli Khan Sardar As‘ad, 119 Anglo-Dutch War (1780–84), 55 26th of July Movement, 266 Anglo-Persian Treaty (1919), 139, 142 Abbas, Mahmoud, 258–259 Anglo-Russian Trade Agreement Abdülhamid II (Ottoman), 24 (1921), 140 Adamec, Ladislav, 236 Angola, 177 Afghanistan, 33, 140, 160, 194–195, 197, Anticommunist Revolutions, 1, 3, 14, 198, 205, 214 33–34, 66, 113, 215–241 Ahmad, Jalal Al-i, 209, 210 April 6 Youth Movement (Egypt), 243 Ahrar al-Sham, 259 Arab Spring, 3, 15, 34–35, 72, 242–261 Al-Afghani, Jamal al-Din, 208 Arabian Peninsula, 18, 24, 107, 163 Al-Assad, Bashar, 254 Arendt, Hannah, 8, 13, 36, 40 Al-Assad, Hafez, 198, 200, 245 Argentina, 82, 107, 113, 146 Alawites, 254 Armenia, 140 Albania, 33 Armenians, 125, 152, 154 Alexander II (Romanov), 101 Army of the Vosges, 22, 95 Algeria, 23, 30, 35, 177, 204, 245, 246–247 Atatürk, Mustafa Kemal, 201 Black October, 245 Atlantic Revolutions, 2, 5–6, 8, 12–13, Algerian War of Independence, 209, 213 15–20, 31, 38–65, 89, 109, 263–264 Algiers, 23, 99–100 Australia, 82–84, 102 Al-Haddad, Sheikh, 99 Austria, 18, 34, 56, 67, 71, 77–78, 85, 105, Allen, William, 85 113, 137, 160, 229 Alliance of Free Democrats (SzDSz), Austrian Empire, 71, 77–78, 85 225, 227 Austrian Netherlands, 17, 55–56 Al-Maliki, Nuri, 258 Austrian Revolution, 160 Al-Mokrani, Muhammad bin al-Haj Avignon, 54 Ahmad, 99 Al-Qa‘ida, 195, 259 Baden, 21–22, 67, 78 Al-Sadat,
    [Show full text]