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Germany's Postwar Socialism: Nationalism and Kurt Schumacher (1945–52)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

Although the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) did not officially abandon Marxism until the Bad Godesberg Parteitag in 1959, both intellectually and politically the party's ideology was revised under the leadership of Kurt Schumacher whose “passion, intellect, and will” dominated the SPD for seven years following World War II (1945–52). The final disintegration of German Marxism under Kurt Schumacher can be demonstrated by examining the three crucial elements of Marxist socialist ideology: (1) motivation for socialism, (2) theory of the socialist movement, and (3) relations between German nationalism and socialism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1965

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References

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20 In Wandlungen des Sozialismus (Verlag fuer Wirtschaft und Politik, 1947)Google Scholar Ortleib wrote that the aims of both socialism and liberalism “are the same. Their means are different. The aim of both is social order conceived in freedom and justice. Liberalism strives at this aim through an individualistically organized free economic order; socialism believes that only a socially interwoven economy can reach this goal.” (p. 38); further, see Ortleib's, article “Neuer Liberalismus?” in Das sozialistische Jahrhundert, No. 17/18 (1947), esp. p. 258Google Scholar; see also his very interesting criticisms of the party's ideology after the lost Bundestag elections in 1953, in Gewerkschaftliche Monatshefte, October, 1953, pp. 593 ff., esp. p. 598.

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43 Richard Loewenthal, an exiled German socialist theoretician first worked for the English Observer and now teaches at the Free University of West Berlin.

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68 Protokoll … 1946, pp. 32–33.

69 Ibid., p. 24.

70 See Protokoll … 1950, pp. 101 ff.

71 See, for example, Protokoll … 1946, p. 32; Protokoll … 1950, p. 67.

72 Fuer Frieden, Freiheit und Sozialismus, pp. 4–5.

73 Cf. “Brief von Kurt Schmidt an seine Freunde in New York,” Her neue Kampf um Freiheit, p. 15. “We were not liberated,” he said, “we were vanquished.” How deeply Schumacher was hurt by the Allied refusal to treat the“good” Germans as equals is shown, for example, in Protokoll … 1946, p. 32; cf. Wesemann, Fried, Kurt Schumacher (Frankfurt A.M., 1952), p. 109Google Scholar.

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75 Protokoll … 1946, p. 62; see also Wesemann, , op. cit., pp. 139, 194Google Scholar.

76 Protokoll … 1946, p. 25.

77 Protokoll … 1950, pp. 65, 82.

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88 Schumacher's chief antagonist, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, never regarded the socialist leader as “another Hitler.” In a conference with Winston Churchill, held in London on December 3, 1951, Adenauer is reported to have answered Churchill's query about West Germany's internal situation in the following way: “We shall not permit a repetition of events of 1930 to 1933. Herr Schumacher, also, should not b e taken so tragically. He is a nationalist with a Marxist foundation. The greatest danger lies in the problem of refugees.” Weymar, Paul, Konrad Adenauer (Muenchen, 1955), p. 658Google Scholar.

89 Protokoll … 1950 p. 248; cf. Wahrhaftig, S. L., “Der Weg der Sozialdemokraten,” first publ. in Frankfurter Hefte (1952)Google Scholar, reprinted in Ossip K. Flechtheim, Die deutschen Parteien seit 1945 (Berlin, 1957), p. 110.

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95 Handbuch sozialdemokratischer Politik, p. 144.

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98 Ibid, pp. 46 ff.