Research Catalog

Proletarian performance in Weimar Berlin : Agitprop, chorus, and Brecht

Title
Proletarian performance in Weimar Berlin : Agitprop, chorus, and Brecht / Richard Bodek.
Author
Bodek, Richard, 1961-
Publication
Columbia, SC, USA : Camden House, ©1997.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library PN3307.G4 B64 1997Off-site

Details

Description
xiv, 184 pages : illustrations; 24 cm.
Summary
The late years of the Weimar Republic were a time of political disillusionment and economic disintegration. Nowhere were the forces competing for the political allegiances of the working class more active than in Berlin. Bodek's study examines the interplay of socialist and communist politics with the world of the working class (and particularly its young people) in the forms of agitprop theater, workers' chorus, and the modernist theater of Brecht. Using sources such as newspaper articles and reviews, the texts of agitprop plays, festival and concert programs, and police reports, Bodek provides a new angle on the cultural and political forces at work in the proletarian sphere during the period, and shows how the theater of Brecht draws on many of its aesthetic assumptions. Bodek examines the very different aesthetics and political assumptions of Social Democratic workers choruses and Communist agitprop theater. Although the political cadres of both parties were concerned with the influence of economic, social, and class factors on the production of art and in turn on the population in general, they developed and pursued radically different programs in their attempts to use culture to further their political goals. The unwillingness of these two Marxist movements to work together helped to open the door to the National Socialist seizure of power. The book's attention to Communist agitprop troupes in Berlin is path-breaking. The young people of these troupes wrote and performed their own material, which was supposed to be of general topical interest and based on the Communist Party's (the KPD's) political line at the time. The troupes were important to the KPD because they served as a surrogate mass medium for communication of its message. To understand these troupes, Proletarian Performance in Weimar Berlin investigates the realities of the lives of working-class youth of the period, describing and analyzing unemployment, housing, education, and leisure activities, and examining their relationship to the Weimar state as they saw it.
Series Statement
Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
Uniform Title
Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
Subject
  • Brecht, Bertolt, 1898-1956 > Criticism and interpretation
  • Brecht, Bertolt, 1898-1956
  • Brecht, Bertolt 1898-1956
  • Brecht, Bertolt
  • 1900-1999
  • Agitprop theater > Germany > Berlin
  • Workers' theater > Germany > Berlin > History > 20th century
  • Theater > Political aspects > Germany > Berlin > 20th century
  • Agitprop theater
  • Theater > Political aspects
  • Workers' theater
  • Agitproptheater
  • Arbeitertheater
  • Politisches Theater
  • Weimarer Republik
  • Weimar-republiek
  • Toneel
  • Germany > Berlin
  • Berlin
Genre/Form
  • Criticism, interpretation, etc.
  • History.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [163]-179) and index.
Contents
The not-so-golden twenties: the world of Berlin's working-class youth -- Red song: social democratic chorus in the late republic -- Agitprop theater in the working-class world -- We are the Red Megaphone! Agitprop theater on the proletarian stage -- Bertolt Brecht's agitprop and the circulation of ideas in the late republic.
ISBN
  • 1571131264
  • 9781571131263
LCCN
97015691
OCLC
  • ocm36922687
  • 36922687
  • SCSB-9383548
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library