Course book (journal)

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class book
The first course book (1965)
description Culture magazine
language German
publishing company Kursbuch Kulturstiftung ( Germany )
Headquarters Hamburg
First edition June 10, 1965
Frequency of publication every three months
Editor-in-chief Peter Felixberger
editor Armin Nassehi ,
Peter Felixberger
Web link course book.online
ISSN (print)

Kursbuch is the title of a German cultural magazine that was founded in 1965 by Hans Magnus Enzensberger in collaboration with Karl Markus Michel and was initially published by Suhrkamp Verlag . It was the most important bodies of 68 extra-parliamentary opposition and the student movement ( APO counted).

history

In 1968 the magazine became increasingly politicized, which led to an increase in circulation from 10,000 to around 50,000 copies. From 1970 the course book was published by Klaus Wagenbach , after its split in 1973 by Rotbuch Verlag Berlin, and from 1990 by Rowohlt Verlag . His character was largely shaped over the decades by Karl Markus Michel , who died in 2000. Tilman Spengler and Ingrid Karsunke continued it. Ina Hartwig was added to the editorial team. From summer 2005 (number 161) to June 2008 (number 169) the course book was published by der Zeit ( Georg von Holtzbrinck publishing group ) by Michael Naumann and Tilman Spengler; the content orientation and the appearance were fundamentally changed and converted to a magazine format. The course book was published every three months and each contained texts on a specific topic.

As the print run remained well below 10,000 at the end of the day, Tilman Spengler announced the discontinuation of the magazine in June 2008.

In August 2011, Murmann Verlag GmbH (Murmann Publishers GmbH since 2014) in Hamburg acquired all rights to the Kursbuch, which has been published again since February 2012 - with four annual editions. The course book has been published by the Kursbuch Kulturstiftung since 2017. Since 2012 the Munich sociologist Armin Nassehi and the program manager of Murmann Verlag Peter Felixberger have been the editors . In the two-week "Monday Block" column, the editors highlight current issues and developments.

The kursbuch.edition series has been published since 2016, in which course book authors continue to think and carry out their essays from the course books in book length. The series published in March 2018, among other things, the book by 68 contemporary witness Gretchen Dutschke . On the occasion of the 200th edition of the magazine, the Kursbuch Kulturstiftung digitized old course books in December 2019 and made them freely available in a digital archive.

Individual volumes

Overview of the first course books from 1965 to 1975:

1965
  • Course book 1: (untitled), 1.1965
  • Course book 2: On violence , 1.1965
  • Course book 3: The traces of madness , 1.1965
1966
  • Course book 4: Catechism on the German Question , 1.1966
  • Course book 5: Description of some things , 1.1966
  • Course book 6: Where is Vietnam? , 1.1966
  • Course book 7: The enemy , 1.1966
1967
  • Course book 8: New Mathematics / Basic Research / Theory of Automata , 1.1967
  • Course book 9: Conjectures about the revolution / Controversies about the protest , 1.1967
  • Course book 10: (Poems and Stories), 1.1967
1968
  • Course book 11: Revolution in Latin America , 1.1968
  • Course book 12: The Undeclared Emergency , 1.1968
  • Course Book 13: The Students and Power , 1.1968
  • Course book 14: Criticism of the Future , 1968
  • Course book 15: I, II, III (poems and short stories), 1968
1969
  • Course book 16: Cultural Revolution - Dialectic of Liberation , 1969
  • Course book 17: Woman - Family - Society , 1969
  • Course book 18: Cuba , 1969
  • Course book 19: Critique of Anarchism , 1969
1970
  • Course book 20: On aesthetic questions , 1970
  • Course book 21: Transitions to Socialism , 1.1970
  • Course Book 22: North American States. Dossier 1: Daily Fascism ,
    North American Conditions. Dossier 2: Social Revolutionary Groups in the USA / Black Capitalism , 1.1970
1971
  • Course book 23: Transitions to Socialism , 1.1971
  • Course book 24: School, training, teaching , 1.1971
  • Course book 25: Politicization: Criticism and Self-Criticism , 1.1971
  • Course Book 26: The Class Struggles in Italy , 1971
1972
  • Course book 27: Planen Bauen Wohnen , 1.1972
  • Course book 28: The misery with psychiatry, I Psychiatry , 7.1972
  • Course book 29: The misery with psychiatry, II Psychoanalysis , 9.1972
  • Course book 30: Socialism as State Power, 1.1973
1973
  • Course book 31: State authority and reformism , 1.1973
  • Course book 32: Torture in the FRG. On the situation of the political prisoners .
  • Course book 33: Ecology and Politics or The Future of Industrialization , 1.1973
  • Course book 34: Children , 1.1973
1974
  • Course book 35: Types of traffic, I women men left. On the difficulties of their emancipation , 1.1974
  • Course book 36: Money , 1.1974
  • Course book 37: Forms of traffic, II Emancipation in the group and the "costs" of solidarity , 10.1974
  • Course book 38: wage labor , 1.1974
1975
  • Course book 39: Province , 1975
  • Course book 40: Profession: Long or short march? , 1975

literature

  • Peter Felixberger, Armin Nassehi (ed.): Course book 182. The course book. What for? 50 years. The anniversary edition . Sven Murmann Verlagsgesellschaft, Hamburg 2015, ISBN 978-3-86774-424-9 .
  • Peter Felixberger, Armin Nassehi (Ed.): Course book 200th Revolte 2020. Course book Kulturstiftung, Hamburg 2019, ISBN 978-3-96196-099-6 .
  • Henning Marmulla: Enzensberger's course book. A magazine about 68. Matthes & Seitz, Berlin 2011, ISBN 978-3-88221-624-0 .
  • Henning Marmulla: The course book: National magazine, international communication, transnational public. In: Martin Klimke, Joachim Scharloth (Hrsg.): 1968. Handbook on the cultural and media history of the student movement. Bonn 2008, pp. 37-47.
  • Kristof Niese: “Vademecum” of the protest movement? Transnational mediation through the course book from 1965 to 1975. Nomos Verlag, Baden-Baden 2017, ISBN 978-3-8487-4303-2 ; Review .
  • Kristof Niese: Change processes in literary magazines: communication culture in "course book" and course sheets 1965-1975. [1] , in: 1968 in German literary studies / topic group “The 68ers: Topics, Theses, Theories” (literaturkritik.de archive / special editions) (2020).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kursbuch 1, June 1965, Frankfurt a. M .: Suhrkamp, ​​1965. The imprint says: “Responsible for the content: Hans Magnus Enzensberger. Editor: Karl Markus Michel. "
  2. http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/tagungsberichte/id=3889
  3. ^ Kursbuch Verlag / Wagenbach, from 21 (September) 1970. Orally identified in: Der Spiegel 25/1970.
  4. ^ Kursbuch / Rotbuch Verlag
  5. ^ Spiegel Online: "Kursbuch" will be discontinued on June 11, 2008
  6. About us. Accessed October 2, 2018 (German).
  7. Deutschlandfunk: Revival of the cultural-political journal "Kursbuch" from March 26, 2012
  8. Monday block. Retrieved on April 6, 2020 (German).
  9. Peter Felixberger: Weg vom Panikjournalismus , buchmarkt.de of July 31, 2016, accessed on August 20, 2017
  10. 1968 - The new book by Gretchen Dutschke | Official website. Retrieved February 19, 2018 .
  11. ^ Course book. Retrieved April 6, 2020 .
  12. Kursbuch 1965-1975: Overview with table of contents, by Magdalena Müller and Monique Sontag