![]() |
|
![]() |
Simplicissimus
|
(See an illustrated cover of the journal Simplicissimus from the same Spartacus Educational Website Albert Langen, the son of a Rhineland industrialist, started
Simplicissimus in 1896. His first recruit was the cartoonist, Thomas Heine.
Each week Heine provided the drawing that appeared on the front cover
of Simplicissimus. He
also persuaded several talented writers such as Thomas Mann,
Frank
Wedekind
and Rainer Maria
Rilke to contribute to the magazine. |
It's a good thing he didn't resist the punishment - other wise he would have gotten two years in the stockade. |
Simplicissimus (September, 1910)
In
1906 the editor of Simplicissimus, Ludwig Thoma
was imprisoned for six months for an article he wrote criticizing
Catholic and Protestant clergy. However, it soon became clear that
these well-publicized court cases actually helped the journal. As
a result of the court case, circulation increased from 15,000 to 85,000.
When the king of Bavaria objected to one particular edition and demanded
that action be taken against Simplicissimus,
his police chief warned against the move pointing
out that "prohibition would be ineffective
and would only serve as an advertisement".
In 1906 several staff members, including Ludwig Thoma,
Thomas Heine,
Olaf Gulbransson,
Rudolf Wilke,
and Edward Thony
persuaded Albert Langen
to change Simplicissimus into a joint stock company.
This gave more power to the staff to control the direction of the
journal. Thoma, a former lawyer, became editor-in-chief of Simplicissimus after the death of Langen
in 1909.
In 1910 socialists
and trade unionists
in Germany organised massive demonstrations in favour of liberal reforms.
This demonstrations frequently escalated into violent classes with
the police. Several of the cartoons published in Simplicissimus during this period complained
of police brutality. However, Simplicissimus remained critical of
the behaviour of left-wing demonstrators and in one cartoon by Thomas Heine,
they were accused of using violence against the middle classes.
If you're well dressed, the mob beats you up; if you're poorly dressed, the police beat you up. Oh well - in this outfit nothing can happen to me! |
Left-wing journals
also attacked Simplicissimus for
the images it presented of working people. The editor of the Kölnische
Zeitung wrote that: "The German worker simply
does not look the way Simplicissimus
portrays him. The worker, who strives courageously
for the recognition of his personal worth, is insulted
when he is portrayed as a drunkard or as a ragged
street urchin living in an evil-smelling hovel."
Simplicissimus was opposed to the foreign
policy of the German government before the outbreak of the First World War.
However, once fighting began, Simplicissimus gave its full support
to the war effort. Ludwig Thoma,
the editor, later reported: "All of us had supported
peace. With no cautious reservations we had denounced
the personal rule and all its harmful manifestations.
But once the war was there nothing mattered but our
own country."
Ludwig Thoma called
a meeting where he suggested that the journal should
close down as : "there was no place for a satirical
sheet which opposed the ruling powers of Germany." Thomas Heine
disagreed and argued that it was important that Simplicissimus should
continue as the "Fatherland needed a periodical of such international prestige to
support the war effort." The majority of the staff
agreed and it was published throughout the war.
Ludwig Thoma
joined the German Army
and during the war and in 1917 wrote to a friend and denounced his
earlier work with Simplicissimus: "I
used to shout my mouth off. This now seems immature
and deplorable. Belief and criticism are incompatible."
After the Armistice Simplicissimus led the campaign against the Versailles Treaty. Ludwig Thoma, its editor, had served in a medical unit during the war. He no longer held liberal views and instead joined a right-wing group called Deutsche Vaterlandspartei.
Thoma ceased
to play an active role in Simplicissimus in
the 1920s. Original members of the group that
was still with Simplicissimus included Thomas Heine, Olaf Gulbransson, and Edward Thony.
The cartoonist, Karl Arnold,
was also now one of the owners. Other talented artists
such as Erich
Schilling, George Grosz and Kathe Kollwitz also
contributed to the journal. Simplicissimus was
unable to increase its circulation and during the
1920s hovered around 30,000 copies, compared to the
86,000 it achieved in 1914.
In the 1920s Simplicissimus defended
the Weimar Republic against threats from the revolutionary
left and right-wing nationalism. It strongly opposed Adolf Hitler and
the right-wing press accused Simplicissimus of
being under the control of the Jews. The
Nazis were especially hostile to the cartoons of Thomas Heine and Walter Trier.
When the Nazis gained
power in 1933 stormtroopers arrived at the offices
of Simplicissimus and warned against
the publication of anti-Hitler cartoons.
When left-wing writers artists began to be arrested
in Germany Thomas Heine and Walter Trier left
the country but Olaf Gulbransson, Karl Arnold, Erich Schilling
and Edward Thony carried
on working at Simplicissimus. Although
most refused to actively support the regime Schilling
became a fervent support of the new regime. Simplicissimus continued
during the early stages of the Second World War but
finally ceased publication in 1944.
(1) Kölnische
Zeitung (28th December, 1908)
The
German worker simply does not look
the way Simplicissimus
portrays him. The worker, who strives courageously
for the recognition of his personal worth, is insulted
when he is portrayed as a drunkard or as a ragged
street urchin living in an evil-smelling hovel.
(2) Ludwig
Thoma, Autobiography (1933)
All
of us had supported peace. With no cautious reservations
we had denounced the personal rule and all its harmful
manifestations. But once the war was there nothing
mattered but our own country.
(3)
Ludwig Thoma, letter to Conrad Haussmann
(1917)
I
used to shout my mouth off. This now seems immature
and deplorable. Belief and criticism are incompatible.