![]() Cover of the first edition. | |
Author | Karl Aloys Schenzinger |
---|---|
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
Genre | Novel |
Published | 1932 |
Publisher | "Zeitgeschichte” Verlag |
Media type | |
Pages | 264 |
Der Hitlerjunge Quex is a 1932 Nazi propaganda novel by Karl Aloys Schenzinger based on the life of Herbert “Quex” Norkus. [1] The 1933 film Hitlerjunge Quex: Ein Film vom Opfergeist der deutschen Jugend was based on it and was described by Joseph Goebbels as the "first large-scale" transmission of Nazi ideology using the medium of cinema. [2] Both the book and the film, like S.A.-Mann Brand and Hans Westmar , which were released the same year, fictionalised and glorified death in the service of the Nazi Party and Adolf Hitler. [3]
Both the novel and film are based on the real story of Herbert Norkus' life. Norkus, a Hitler Youth member, had died from injuries suffered while being chased and confronted by Communist youths in the night of 23/24 January 1932 in the Beusselkietz neighbourhood of Moabit, Berlin. [4] Already on the next morning, Joseph Goebbels began to use Norkus' death for propaganda purposes during a rally in Berlin's Sportpalast. [5] The funeral on 29 January at Plötzensee, Berlin, was turned into a major ceremony of several Nazi party organizations, under the aegis of Goebbels. [5] While the murder was condemned also by non-Nazi press, the Communists started a counter-propaganda offensive, describing the incident as an accidental result of Communist self-defence during a Nazi attack. [6] In the subsequent trial, several people were sentenced by the Landgericht I court in Moabit[ clarification needed ], yet the most prominent accomplices Willi Simon, Bernhard Klingbeil and Harry Tack had been able to escape to the Soviet Union. [5]
After the Nazis assumed power, the grave of Norkus was turned into a Nazi shrine which was visited annually on New Year's Day by Nazi youth leader Baldur von Schirach for a speech that was broadcast nationwide. [7] To the site of Norkus' death at Zwinglistraße 4, [8] a plaque was attached reading "He Gave His Life For Germany's Freedom", the first of several such memorial plaques subsequently placed throughout Germany. [7] 24 January was made remembrance day for all killed Hitler Youths, and the flag of Norkus' unit became the Hitler Youth's "blood flag". [7] Two weeks after the Enabling Act of 1933, a provocative Hitler Youth march to Norkus' grave took the route through Berlin's communist districts of Wedding and Moabit. [7] Throughout Germany, the Nazis organized demonstrations and speeches commemorating their newly created martyr. [1] Novels, plays, poems and songs were written about him. [1]
The novel Der Hitlerjunge Quex was written by Karl Aloys Schenzinger between May and September 1932. [1] It was first published in the Nazi Party newspaper Völkischer Beobachter and as a book in December 1932. [1] A required reading for Hitler Youth members, [1] it had more than 190,000 copies sold within two years [9] and more than 500,000 copies by 1945. [1]
In Schenzinger's novel, Herbert Norkus is named Heini Völker. [9] With a völkisch undertone, the opening chapters describe the hardships of Norkus' youth in a working-class district of Berlin, characterised by the Great Depression, the unemployment of his father and the suicide of his mother. [9] The contemporary communist youth ( Rote Jungfront , "Red Young Front") is portrayed as a disorderly gang devoted primarily to alcohol, tobacco and sex. [9] In contrast, the Nazi youth ( Hitlerjugend , "Hitler Youth") is portrayed as an orderly organisation, superior in morals. [9] Schenzinger lets Heini Völker's father force his son to attend a camping weekend organised by a communist youth group, North Star Moabit. Heini is disgusted and flees the camp, only to encounter a Hitler Youth group in the woods. [9] Deeply impressed and in an atmosphere of nationalistic pathos, Heini learns of the Nazi movement, Führerprinzip ("leader principle"), comradeship and Volksgemeinschaft ("the people's community"). [9] On "the happiest day of his life", Heini joins the Hitler Youth, and Schenzinger has the Bannführer (group leader) symbolise Nazi ideology when he hands over Heini's uniform to him: "[The uniform] is the clothing of the community, of comradeship, of our ideology, of our unified organisation! [...] It makes us all equal, and gives the same to all and demands the same from all. He who wears such a uniform does not have desires of his own anymore, he has only to obey." [10]
The following chapters deal with Heini's life as a Hitler Youth. [10] Obedience and equality, as understood by the Nazis, are portrayed in a very positive light. [10] They turn out to be beneficial not only for Heini but also for his comrades such as his friend Fritz Dörries, the son of a lawyer. [10] Emphasis is put on the vision of self-sacrifice, the abolition of social barriers and racial purity, and Heini learns from Fritz that "with us Hitler Youth, there are no classes. There are only those who get the job done and parasites, and those we'll throw out." [10] The haven that Heini found in the Hitler Youth is symbolised by his group's hang-out, "Castle Beusselkietz"; [11] Norkus' group was Schar 2, Hitlerjugend Beusselkietz-Hansa. [7] His comrades nicknamed him Quex because "he carried out orders faster than quicksilver" (German : Quecksilber). [10]
The last part of the novel is devoted to the circumstances of Heini Volker's (or Norkus's) death. [11] According to Baird (1992), Schenzinger's version is a "thinly veiled parallel to Resurrection": [11] When his comrades were gathered around his deathbed and wonder whether he is still alive, there "suddenly [...] is a scream. Heini is sitting up in bed, his eyes wide open. He is singing. They don't recognise the words, but they know the melody. It's the song they sing every day, every evening together, on every march. Everyone knows what it means - death is singing here." [11]
Staff [12] | |
---|---|
Producer | Karl Ritter |
Director | Hans Steinhoff |
Script | Bobby E. Lüthge Karl Aloys Schenzinger |
Cinematography | Konstantin Irmen-Tschet |
Ass. Camera | Fred Fernau Erich Rudolf Schmidke |
Publicity Photography | Otto Schulz |
Editing | Milo Habich |
Set Design | Benno von Arent Arthur Günther |
Make-up | Waldemar Jabs |
Clothing | Berta Grützmacher Paul Haupt |
Sound | Walter Tjaden Erich Leistner |
Music | Hans-Otto Borgmann Baldur von Schirach |
Cast [12] | |
---|---|
Heini Völker | Jürgen Ohlsen |
Father Völker | Heinrich George |
Mother Völker | Berta Drews |
Brigade leader Cass | Claus Clausen |
Fritz Dörris | a Hitler Youth |
Gerda | Rotraut Richter |
Stoppel | Hermann Speelmans |
Franz | Hans Richter |
Grundler | a Hitler Youth |
Kowalski | Ernst Behmer |
Doctor | Hans Joachim Büttner |
Nurse | Franziska Kinz |
Carnival singer | Rudolf Platte |
Barker | Reinhold Bernt |
Furniture dealer | Hans Deppe |
Neighbor | Anna Müller-Lincke |
Wilde | Karl Meixner |
Grocer | Karl Hannemann |
Desk sergeant | Ernst Rotmund |
Bartender | Hans Otto Stern |
Further | Herrmann Braun Heinz Trumper Hitler Youth units |
The novel provided the basis for a subsequent film version, produced in the Universum Film AG (Ufa) studios. [12] The plot was written by Bobby E. Lüthge and Karl Aloys Schenzinger, the author of the novel. [12] Produced by Karl Ritter, [12] the film was supported by the Nazi leadership and produced for 320,000 ℛ︁ℳ︁ [13] under the aegis of Baldur von Schirach. [14] The latter also wrote the lyrics for the Hitler Youth song " Unsere Fahne flattert uns voran ", [15] based on an existing melody by Hans-Otto Borgmann, who was also responsible for the music. [12] The director was Hans Steinhoff. [12] For the film, the novel's title was amended with the subtitle Ein Film vom Opfergeist der deutschen Jugend ("A film about the sacrificial spirit of German youth"). [12] The film has a length of 95 minutes (2,605 metres) and was premiered on 11 September 1933 at the Ufa-Phoebus Palace, Munich, and on 19 September at the Ufa-Palast am Zoo, Berlin. [12] It was one of three films about Nazi martyrs in 1933, the other two being SA-Mann Brand and Hans Westmar , and by January 1934, it had been viewed by a million people. [13]
The film's message is characterised by its final words' "The flag means more than death". [16]
Baldur Benedikt von Schirach was a German politician who served as head of the Hitler Youth from 1931 to 1940. From 1940 to 1945, he was the Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter of Vienna.
Nazi songs are songs and marches created by the Nazi Party. In modern Germany, the public singing or performing of songs exclusively associated with the Nazi Party is now illegal.
Horst Ludwig Georg Erich Wessel was a member of the Sturmabteilung (SA), the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party, who became a propaganda symbol in Nazi Germany following his murder in 1930 by two members of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD). After his death Joseph Goebbels turned him into a martyr for the Nazi Party.
Volksgemeinschaft is a German expression meaning "people's community", "folk community", "national community", or "racial community", depending on the translation of its component term Volk. This expression originally became popular during World War I as Germans rallied in support of the war, and many experienced "relief that at one fell swoop all social and political divisions could be solved in the great national equation". The idea of a Volksgemeinschaft was rooted in the notion of uniting people across class divides to achieve a national purpose, and the hope that national unity would "obliterate all conflicts - between employers and employees, town and countryside, producers and consumers, industry and craft".
Earthly Powers is a panoramic saga novel of the 20th century by Anthony Burgess first published in 1980. It begins with the "outrageously provocative" first sentence: "It was the afternoon of my eighty-first birthday, and I was in bed with my catamite when Ali announced that the archbishop had come to see me."
Nazism made extensive use of the cinema throughout its history. Though it was a relatively new technology, the Nazi Party established a film department soon after it rose to power in Germany. Both Adolf Hitler and his propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels used the many Nazi films to promote the party ideology and show their influence in the burgeoning art form, which was an object of personal fascination for Hitler. The Nazis valued film as a propaganda instrument of enormous power, courting the masses by means of slogans that were aimed directly at the instincts and emotions of the people. The Department of Film also used the economic power of German moviegoers to influence the international film market. This resulted in almost all Hollywood producers censoring films critical of Nazism during the 1930s, as well as showing news shorts produced by the Nazis in American theaters.
Herbert Norkus was a Hitler Youth member who was killed by German Communists. He became a role model and martyr for the Hitler Youth and was widely used in Nazi propaganda, most prominently as the subject of novel and film Hitler Youth Quex.
Hermann Braun was a German film actor, and the son of chamber singer Carl Braun.
Hans Westmar was the last of an unofficial trilogy of films produced by the Nazis shortly after coming to power in January 1933, celebrating their Kampfzeit – the history of their period in opposition, struggling to gain power. The film is a partially fictionalized biography of the Nazi martyr Horst Wessel.
Hans Steinhoff was a German film director, best known for the propaganda films he produced in Nazi Germany
The propaganda of the Nazi regime that governed Germany from 1933 to 1945 promoted Nazi ideology by demonizing the enemies of the Nazi Party, notably Jews and communists, but also capitalists and intellectuals. It promoted the values asserted by the Nazis, including Heldentod, Führerprinzip, Volksgemeinschaft, Blut und Boden and pride in the Germanic Herrenvolk. Propaganda was also used to maintain the cult of personality around Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, and to promote campaigns for eugenics and the annexation of German-speaking areas. After the outbreak of World War II, Nazi propaganda vilified Germany's enemies, notably the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and the United States, and in 1943 exhorted the population to total war.
Hans-Otto Borgmann was a German film music composer during the Third Reich.
Hitlerjunge Quex, in English Hitler Youth Quex, is a 1933 German film directed by Hans Steinhoff, based on the similarly named 1932 novel Der Hitlerjunge Quex by Karl Aloys Schenzinger. The film was shown in the US under the title Our Flag Leads Us Forward.
Karl Meixner was an Austrian film actor.
Jürgen Ohlsen was a German actor best remembered for portraying "Heini "Quex" Völker" in the 1933 Nazi propaganda film Hitlerjunge Quex.
Karl Ritter was a German film producer and director responsible for many Nazi propaganda films. He had previously been one of the first German military pilots. He spent most of his later life in Argentina.
The Ufa-Palast am Zoo, located near Berlin Zoological Garden in the New West area of Charlottenburg, was a major Berlin cinema owned by Universum Film AG, or Ufa. Opened in 1919 and enlarged in 1925, it was the largest cinema in Germany until 1929 and was one of the main locations of film premières in the country. The building was destroyed in November 1943 during the Bombing of Berlin in World War II and replaced in 1957 by the Zoo Palast.
Rotraut Richter was a German stage and film actress. She appeared in the role of Gerda in the 1933 Nazi propaganda film Hitlerjunge Quex, receiving a letter of thanks from Joseph Goebbels along with the rest of the cast.
Quex may refer to:
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