The literary world

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The literary world. The independent organ for German literature was a periodical in the Weimar Republic that was founded as a weekly by Ernst Rowohlt and Willy Haas in 1925 in Berlin . The magazine was published from 1925 to 1933 under the editorship of Willy Haas. In 1934, in the course of what the Nazi rulers called " Gleichschaltung ", it was renamed Das deutsche Wort .

history

First the magazine appeared in the literary world publishing company , Berlin-Lichterfelde. The editorial office was in Passauer Strasse . After Haas' emigration , it was briefly continued as the “New Series” of the same title (1933–1934), edited by Karl Rauch. After the magazine was called the German word in the sense of the National Socialist “ Gleichschaltung ” since 1934 , it was published by the Berlin publishing house Bott. It was discontinued in 1941.

Re-entry of the title for a newspaper insert

From 1998 the daily newspaper Die Welt published a journal for literary events as a Saturday supplement under the title The literary world , with the note: "Founded by Willy Haas, 1925". Was responsible Richard Kämmerlings . Rachel Salamander published the literature supplement from 2001 to 2013 . Mara Delius took over the management in March 2017. She had been a feature section editor and another writer in the world since 2011 . Since then, the literary world has been a regular, almost daily Twitter presence by the editors. As with all other newspapers, the printed content is now under the name Feuilleton - Kultur - Literatur .

Authors

The historical authors include a .:

literature

  • Willy Haas: The literary world. Life memories . Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 1983, ISBN 3-596-25607-0 (reprint from 1957)
  • The literary world. Independent organ for German literature. Kraus, Nendeln FL 1973 ( DNB 550123849 ).
  • Pascale Avenel: Willy Haas et le périodique “The literary world” 1925–1933. Presses Universitaires du Septentrion, Villeneuve d'Ascq 1997, ISBN 2-284-00204-8 ( dissertation University of Lille 1995).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ernst Fischer, Stephan Füssel (ed.): History of the German Book Trade in the 19th and 20th Centuries , Part 2, Berlin, Boston, 2012, p. 99
  2. Ernst Fischer, Stephan Füssel (ed.), History of the German Book Trade in the 19th and 20th Centuries , Part 2, Berlin, Boston, 2012, p. 99
  3. Rachel Salamander receives the Heine Prize. In: www.sueddeutsche.de. July 14, 2020, accessed July 15, 2020 .