The Brown Plague: Travels in Late Weimar and Early Nazi Germany

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    Daniel Guérin

    Publisher: Duke University Press

    Year: 1994

    Format: Paperback

    Size: 220 pages

    ISBN: 9780822314639

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In 1932 and 1933, during the months surrounding the Nazi seizure of power, Daniel Guérin, then a young French journalist, made two trips through Germany. The Brown Plague, translated here into English for the first time, is Guérin’s eyewitness account of the fall of the Weimar Republic and the first months of the Third Reich. Originally written for the popular French left press and then revised by the author into book form, The Brown Plague delivers a passionate warning to French workers about the terror and horror of fascism. Guérin chronicles the collapse of the German workers’ movement and reports on the beginnings of clandestine resistance to the Nazis. He also describes the Socialist and Communist leaderships’ inability to recognize the danger that led to their demise.

Through vivid dialogs, interviews, and revealing descriptions of everyday life among the German people, he offers insight into the tragedy that was beginning to unfold. Guérin’s travels took him across the countryside and into the cities of Germany. He describes with extraordinary clarity, for example, his encounters with large groups of unemployed workers in Berlin and the spectacle of Goering presiding over the Reichstag. Staying in youth hostels, Guérin met individuals representing a range of various groups and movements, including the Wandervögel, leftist brigades, Hitler Youth, and the strange, semicriminal sexual underground of the Wild-frei.

Devoting particular attention to the cultural politics of fascism and the lure of Nazism for Germany’s disaffected youth, he describes the seductive rituals by which the Nazis were able to win over much of the population. As Robert Schwartzwald makes clear in his introduction, Guérin’s interest in Germany at this time was driven, in part, by a homoerotic component that could not be stated explicitly in his published material. This excellent companion essay also places The Brown Plague within a broad historical and literary context while drawing connections between fascism, aesthetics, and sexuality. Informed by an epic view of class struggle and an admiration for German culture, The Brown Plague, a notable primary source in the literature of modern Europe, provides a unique view onto the rise of Nazism.

What People Are Saying

"Gracefully translated and generously introduced by Robert Schwartzwald, Daniel Guérin’s The Brown Plague is a major document of its time. Though it offers a glimpse into a Left political culture that has, today, largely receded from view, the book’s significance is far from merely commemorative. In its utopian political commitments and suffused homoerotic tonalities, The Brown Plague imagines a future that could, perhaps, be ours as well." Andrew Parker, coeditor of Nationalisms and Sexualities

"Guérin’s style has the ‘epic’ quality of socialist discourse of the 30s, and yet no reader can be indifferent to the moments of real lyricism in his writing—the evocation of the sounds of Nazism, the powerful sense of his privilege and responsibility as a witness." Alice Kaplan, author of French Lessons: A Memoir

About the Author

Daniel Guérin (1904–1988) was the author of over forty books on a range of subjects including anarchism, decolonization, European and American workers’ movements, and the French Revolution. A pioneering gay activist, he was involved in both the postwar homophile movement and the struggles for liberation that followed in France after the upheavals of May 1968.

Robert Schwartzwald (Introduction) is Associate Professor of French at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

Tags: anticapitalism ....... antifascism ....... cultural studies ....... Daniel Guérin ....... Duke University Press ....... europe ....... germany ....... history ....... labor history ....... queer liberation ....... Robert Schwartzwald ....... sexuality .......