March (magazine)

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The March bi-monthly publication for German culture was one of the most successful magazines of the late German Empire . The left-liberal magazine appeared from June 1907 to December 29, 1917 and was first published by Ludwig Thoma , Hermann Hesse , Kurt Aram and Albert Langen in his Munich publishing house . The editors included Wilhelm Herzog and the later Federal President Theodor Heuss , who took over in March 1913. At its best, the bi-weekly and end-weekly magazine had a circulation of 15,000. The March "saw itself as a positive counterpart to Simplicissimus with liberal tendency" . He campaigned for Franco-German understanding under the sign of democracy, for mutual national respect and for the "United States of Europe".

Harald Fischer Verlag, Erlangen, published a new edition of all issues on 120 microfiches in 1998 ( ISBN 3-89131-286-5 ).

literature

  • Helga Abret: The cultural-political magazine “March” as a forum for a Franco-German rapprochement . In: Michel Grunewald, Jochen Schlobach (Ed.), Médiations - Vermittlungs. Aspects des relations franco-allemandes du 17ème siècle à nos jours - Aspects of Franco-German relations from the 17th century to the present. Peter Lang, Frankfurt 1992, Vol. 2, pp. 511-532.

Proof of quotation

  1. ^ So Sibylle Mulot-Déri in: Sir Galahad, Frankfurt 1987, p. 171