Winfried Lüdecke

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Winfried Lüdecke (born May 14, 1886 in Neustettin ) was a German writer.

Since 1908 Lüdecke published several works of fiction. During the First World War he turned to the production of non-fiction literature on topics related to the war, with particular interest in propaganda, intelligence and espionage.

After the war, the situation in his hometown Gdansk became the focus of his publication. He also submitted monarchist writings and an essay on the pathology of Joan of Arc , which appeared in the Zeitschrift für Sexualwissenschaften .

Fonts

  • The flowers of the night. Poems. 1908.
  • Miss Sibylle's kisses. Juncker, Berlin-Charlottenburg 1911.
  • French soldiers' letters. Müller, Munich 1917.
  • SMS "Dresden". According to reports from officers and men. Reclam, Leipzig 1917.
  • Alsace-Lorraine propaganda. 1917.
  • French colonial militarism. Bern 1919.
  • Gdansk black-white-red! 1920.
  • Family history contribution to the pathology of Joan of Arc. In: Journal of Sexual Sciences. Volume 9 (1926), issue 13.
  • Who did not become emperor. Hensel & Co., Berlin 1928.
  • Behind the Scenes of Espionage. Tales of the Secret Service. London 1929.
  • W. Munin [d. i. Winfried Lüdecke]: Women victims in the secret service. Leipzig (1931)

literature

  • Peter Oliver Loewe: The literary Danzig 1793 to 1945: building blocks for a local cultural history , (= Danzig contributions to German studies, vol. 25) Frankfurt am Main 2009.

Individual evidence

  1. Books by Winfried Lüdecke ( Memento from February 23, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) on Buch-Info.org