The Säuberung Baptism: The Reasoning Behind Nazi Book Burning

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The removal of free intellectualism and the integration of the “Pure German Spirit” way of thinking were achieved though the burning of all text deemed “un-German”. But what makes a text un-German? Simply anything that questioned, threatened, or was simply different then what the Führer and the Reich believed in. The burning of thousands of books was caused by the "Action against the Un-German Spirit", by the will of the German student association. The horrid event took place during the Wartburg festival in 1933. (Evans, 2005, p. 327) Hitler’s infamous hatred for the Jews is no secret. He hated everything about them. He even went as far as crushing Jewish intellectualism and purging the German public by eradicating all traces and ties to the Jewish culture. Hitler knew if he could prevent free thinking from happening it would be easier to oppress his enemies and tame his own people at the same time. Free thinking was prevented by the burning of all text that was not pro-German and controlled further conscious thought through propaganda. German students lead the main book burning in May 1933, but many small-scale book burnings were happening throughout Germany. As Geroge L. Mosse puts it, “The book burnings formed a spectacular act on the public stage and were undertaken by a regime which relied on myths, symbols, representative art, and human stereotypes.” (Mosse & Jones, n.d., p. 143)

The Nazism way of thinking has spread throughout Germany. The youth of the nation now called “Hitler Youth” has formed many groups. One of these groups is called the National Socialist German Students’ League, also formally known as Nationalsozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (NSDStB). Their sole purpose was to integrate the Nat...

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..., G., & Jones, J. (n.d.). New German Critique, No. 31 Bookburning and the Betrayal of German Intellectuals (Winter, 1984), pp. 143-155. Duke University Press. Retrieved from http://www.cnm.edu:2146/stable/487893?&Search=yes&searchText=burnings&searchText=book&searchText=nazi&list=hide&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3FQuery%3Dnazi%2Bbook%2Bburnings%26gw%3Djtx%26acc%3Don%26prq%3Dnazi%2Bbookburnings%26Search%3DSearch%26hp%3D25%26wc%3Don&prevSearch=&item=18&ttl=80&returnArticleService=showFullText

Santayana, G. (1905). The life of reason: or, The phases of human progress. C. Scribner's Sons. Retrieved from http://books.google.com/books?id=GT48AAAAIAAJ

Tillich, P., Stone, R. H., & Weaver, M. L. (1998). Against the Third Reich: Paul Tillich's wartime addresses to Nazi Germany. Westminster John Knox Press. Retrieved from http://books.google.com/books?id=R2m0G14BPJoC

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