"Zum Einsatz des Leben fuer Deutschland": Girls' popular fiction during the Third Reich

Item

Title
"Zum Einsatz des Leben fuer Deutschland": Girls' popular fiction during the Third Reich
Identifier
d_2009_2013:2b958a5b0683:10059
identifier
10058
Creator
Payne, Kathryn L.,
Contributor
Tamara S. Evans
Date
2009
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
German literature | Modern literature | Adolescent Girls | National Socialism | Popular Fiction
Abstract
Recent research in the field of Cultural Studies has shown that popular fiction, more than any other genre, provides a way for readers to regulate and structure their lives. The purpose of the present study is to investigate the popular fiction which girls living in Nazi Germany read in an attempt to see how current events and policies are reflected in the novels in an effort to acclimatize girls to life under National Socialism and gain their complete support of the Third Reich. Popular fiction was expected to portray a mirror of life for young readers under National Socialism, with characters giving up their individuality to join the Volksgemeinschaft, and thereby worthy of emulation. In a state where the personal had become political, the novels present a broad picture of girls' life dominated by National Socialism, and as the state developed, the ways and extent that girls might be of use to the Reich in everyday life also becomes more apparent within the stories.;Little research has been done in the area of popular fiction written for girls in Nazi Germany. Most investigations center on texts used in education at National Socialist schools, but popular fiction was actually the preferred choice of reading matter by girls. It was, therefore, the perfect vehicle for supplementing the ideological rhetoric young girls received in the schools, the Bund Deutscher Madel, and the home.;In this dissertation, I have relied, for the most part, on primary documents. These include laws; newspaper articles; speeches; and books written about reading and books, all produced between 1933 and 1945. In addition, 20 adolescent novels are included for an in-depth interpretive textual analysis in an attempt to provide a representative sample of this genre. All of the novels used were mass produced and easily available to girls. Secondary texts concerning research on adolescent literature were also used.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Germanic Languages & Literatures