Uwe Wittstock is a journalist, critic and author who lives in Germany. He was awarded the prestigious Theodor Wolff prize for journalism in 1989.
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Stepping off the Cliff * The month in which the die was cast
The Republic's Last Dance * Saturday, 28 January
Hell Reigns * Monday, 30 January
Axes at the Door * Tuesday, 31 January
Inferior Foreign-Blooded Trash * Thursday, 2 February
Tongue-Tied * Friday, 3 February
Not Sure What to Do * Saturday, 4 February
Burial in the Rain * Sunday, 5 February
Meeting Routine * Monday, 6 February
Hideous, Violent Little Characters * Friday, 10 February
Schutzstaffel for Writers * Sunday, 12 February
Men in Black * Monday, 13 February
Fever and Flight * Tuesday, 14 February
Slamming the Door * Wednesday, 15 February
The Little Schoolteacher * Thursday, 16 February
I'm Leaving. I'm Staying * Friday, 17 February
No Treasure in the Silver Lake * Saturday, 18 February
What's the Point of Writing? * Sunday, 19 February
Pay up! * Monday, 20 February
Pretty Good Cover * Tuesday, 21 February
Surviving the Coming Weeks * Wednesday, 22 February
A Minister in the Audience * Friday, 24 February
Civil War Tribunal and Police Protection * Saturday, 25 February
Travel Advice * Monday, 27 February
Dictatorship Is Here * Tuesday, 28 February
Fading from the World * Wednesday, 1 March
The Fake Mother * Friday, 3 March
Don't Open the Door! * Saturday, 4 March
Casting a Ballot * Sunday, 5 March
The Emigrant's Solitude * Monday, 6 March
Courage, Fear, and Fire * Tuesday, 7 March
Nothing but Goodbyes * Wednesday, 8 March
Unexpected Attacks * Friday, 10 March
Final Days * Saturday, 11 March
Departures * Monday, 13 March
The Sight of This Hell * Wednesday, 15 March
What Happened Afterward * 33 Life Sketches
Afterword
Bibliography
Index
It all happened in a flash. February 1933 was the month in which the fate of German writers, as for so many others, was decided. In a tensely spun narrative, Uwe Wittstock tells the story of a demise which was predicted by some but also scarcely thought possible. He reveals how, in a matter of weeks, the glittering Weimar literary scene gave way to a long, dark winter, and how the net drew ever closer for Thomas Mann, Bertolt Brecht, Else Lasker-Schüler, Alfred Döblin, and countless others.
Monday, January 30: Adolf Hitler is sworn in as Chancellor of Germany. Joseph Roth cannot wait any longer to learn what today's paper will report. He leaves for the station early in the morning and takes the train to Paris; bidding Berlin farewell comes naturally to him. Meanwhile, Thomas Mann barely spares a thought for politics during the next ten days, focusing instead on his forthcoming speech on Richard Wagner.
Weaving an intimate portrait of the major figures whose lives he follows day by day, Wittstock shows how the landslide of events which immediately followed Hitler's victory spelled disaster for the country's literary elite. He resurrects the atmosphere of the times, marked by anxiety for many, by passivity and self-betrayal for some, and by grim determination for others. Who will applaud the new dictator, and who will flee, fearing for their life?
Drawing on unpublished archival material, this important work is both a meticulous historical narrative and a timely reminder that we must remain vigilant in the face of the forces that threaten democracy, however distant the prospect of totalitarianism may seem.