Julius Streicher: Nazi Editor of the Notorious Anti-semitic Newspaper Der Sturmer

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Cooper Square Press, Jul 17, 2001 - History - 264 pages
The Nazis put a remarkable amount of effort into anti-Semitic propaganda, intending to bring ordinary Germans around to the destructive ideology of the Nazi party. Julius Streicher (1885-1946) spearheaded many of these efforts, publishing anti-Semitic articles and cartoons in his weekly newspaper, Der Stürmer, the most widely read paper in the Third Reich. Streicher won the close personal friendship of Hitler and Himmler, and drew deserved attacks from the world press. Bytwerk's biography examines Streicher's use of propaganda techniques, and the hate literature towards Jews that continued to appear after his death, bearing his influence.
 

Contents

The Making of an AntiSemite
1
The Bloody Czar of Franconia
31
Der Stürmer A Fierce and Filthy Rag
51
The German AntiSemitic Tradition
65
Children of the Devil Streichers Image of the Jew
101
Fraud Conspiracy and Murder
119
The Worst Crime Racial Defilement
143
Solutions Final and Otherwise
161
The lllusion of Immunity
183
Afterword to the Cooper Square Press Edition
197
Three Stürmer Articles
207
Two Childrens Stories from the Poisonous Mushroom
213
Notes
221
Bibliography
235
Index
243
Copyright

A Poisoned Nation The Impact of Der Stürmer
171

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About the author (2001)

Randall L. Bytwerk, founder of the Nazi and East German Propaganda Web site at Calvin College (www.calvin. edu/academic/cas/gpa/), lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

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