Bruchsal NS-Ansprache : Différence entre versions

 
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|video=LFS_00462_05_Bruchsal_NS-Ansprache
 
|video=LFS_00462_05_Bruchsal_NS-Ansprache
 
|institution_dorigine=Haus des Dokumentarfilms
 
|institution_dorigine=Haus des Dokumentarfilms
|coloration=Farbe
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|coloration=Couleur
|son=Stummfilm
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|son=Muet
 
|timecode=00:01:39
 
|timecode=00:01:39
 
|duree=00:00:00
 
|duree=00:00:00
|genre=Dokumentarfilm
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|genre=Documentaire
 
|format_original=16 mm
 
|format_original=16 mm
 
|droits=Stadtarchiv Bruchsal
 
|droits=Stadtarchiv Bruchsal
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|Resume_en=NS district assembly in Bruchsal in 1938 in color
 
|Resume_en=NS district assembly in Bruchsal in 1938 in color
 
|Resume_de=Farbige Aufnahmen vom NS-Kreistag in Bruchsal 1938
 
|Resume_de=Farbige Aufnahmen vom NS-Kreistag in Bruchsal 1938
|Contexte_et_analyse_en=The silent 16mm color film with a length of almost 1 ½ minutes shows a speech at the NSDAP district assembly in Bruchsal in 1938, which took place from Saturday, June 25th to Monday, June 27th, 1938. Films in color were possible from 1935 with Kodak material and from May 1937 with the German Agfacolor process, which was probably used here. According to the program, the recordings are about the NSDAP morning party, which took place on Sunday at 11.15 a.m. on the Maifeld in front of the Reichspost and for which about half an hour was scheduled. During this celebration, the flags of the German Labor Front (DAF) were consecrated, whose black uniformed bearers stand on the stands.
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|Contexte_et_analyse_en=[[Fichier:Bruchsal Plan Kreistag Grafik Kohler.jpg|vignette|Plan of the placement of the groups at the morning celebration (Grafik: Kohler)]]
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The silent 16mm color film with a length of almost 1 ½ minutes shows a speech at the NSDAP district assembly in Bruchsal in 1938, which took place from Saturday, June 25th to Monday, June 27th, 1938. Films in color were possible from 1935 with Kodak material and from May 1937 with the German Agfacolor process, which was probably used here. According to the program, the recordings are about the NSDAP morning party, which took place on Sunday at 11.15 a.m. on the Maifeld in front of the Reichspost and for which about half an hour was scheduled. During this celebration, the flags of the German Labor Front (DAF) were consecrated, whose black uniformed bearers stand on the stands.
  
 
The film focuses entirely on what is happening on the grandstand, the back wall of which is covered with red cloth, on top of which is an oversized imperial eagle with a swastika in an oak wreath in its claws. A pan shows the SA music corps in front of the grandstand. The audience and the march of the masses are not shown. The speaker is the NSDAP functionary Emil Epp, who had been head of the Bruchsal district on a full-time basis since 1935. In this position he takes over the consecration of the flags after his address. He shakes hands with the DAF flagmen individually - which is sometimes difficult due to the large flags. The filmmaker follows him with the camera and changes the angle several times in order to be able to film the grandstand from all sides from below. At the final Hitler salute, high-ranking SA functionaries are shown on the stage, dutifully looking forward into the crowd. At the end the SA music corps is shown again in action. “The big district meeting in 1938 was probably the most grandiose National Socialist spectacle that Bruchsal had experienced up to then” (Haus 2001, p. 128). This can only be guessed at in the recordings that have survived, as they concentrate on what is happening in the stands, which is perhaps also due to the brevity of the color material.
 
The film focuses entirely on what is happening on the grandstand, the back wall of which is covered with red cloth, on top of which is an oversized imperial eagle with a swastika in an oak wreath in its claws. A pan shows the SA music corps in front of the grandstand. The audience and the march of the masses are not shown. The speaker is the NSDAP functionary Emil Epp, who had been head of the Bruchsal district on a full-time basis since 1935. In this position he takes over the consecration of the flags after his address. He shakes hands with the DAF flagmen individually - which is sometimes difficult due to the large flags. The filmmaker follows him with the camera and changes the angle several times in order to be able to film the grandstand from all sides from below. At the final Hitler salute, high-ranking SA functionaries are shown on the stage, dutifully looking forward into the crowd. At the end the SA music corps is shown again in action. “The big district meeting in 1938 was probably the most grandiose National Socialist spectacle that Bruchsal had experienced up to then” (Haus 2001, p. 128). This can only be guessed at in the recordings that have survived, as they concentrate on what is happening in the stands, which is perhaps also due to the brevity of the color material.
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[[Fichier:Bruchsal Epp Foto Stadtarchiv Bruchsal A111 3.jpg|vignette|Speaker was the Bruchsal NSDAP district leader Emil Epp (Foto: Stadtarchiv Bruchsal A111/3)]]
  
 
The German Labor Front (DAF) was founded in May 1933 shortly after the unions had been broken up as a joint organization of employees and employers: "The aim of the German Labor Front is to create a real community and performance community for all Germans," it said in the on 24 October 1934 signed by Adolf Hitler on the "Nature and Aim of the German Labor Front". Under the direction of Robert Ley, the DAF was an association affiliated with the NSDAP with 22 million “Aryan” members. The largest mass organization was organized strictly according to the Führer principle in 33 districts with district and local groups. The DAF had 18 'specialist offices' with a wide variety of socio-political activities. One of these sub-organizations was the 'NS-Gemeinschaft Kraft durch Freude', which offered DAF members leisure activities such as vacations, cruises on DAF ships or the project to save money for their own car - the Volkswagen.
 
The German Labor Front (DAF) was founded in May 1933 shortly after the unions had been broken up as a joint organization of employees and employers: "The aim of the German Labor Front is to create a real community and performance community for all Germans," it said in the on 24 October 1934 signed by Adolf Hitler on the "Nature and Aim of the German Labor Front". Under the direction of Robert Ley, the DAF was an association affiliated with the NSDAP with 22 million “Aryan” members. The largest mass organization was organized strictly according to the Führer principle in 33 districts with district and local groups. The DAF had 18 'specialist offices' with a wide variety of socio-political activities. One of these sub-organizations was the 'NS-Gemeinschaft Kraft durch Freude', which offered DAF members leisure activities such as vacations, cruises on DAF ships or the project to save money for their own car - the Volkswagen.

Version actuelle datée du 12 février 2021 à 17:14


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NS-Kreistag Bruchsal

Résumé


NS district assembly in Bruchsal in 1938 in color

Métadonnées

N° support :  LFS 00462 5
Date :  1938
Coloration :  Couleur
Son :  Muet
Timecode :  00:01:39
Durée :  00:00:00
Format original :  16 mm
Genre :  Documentaire
Thématiques :  Seconde Guerre mondiale : avant-guerre
Institution d'origine :  Haus des Dokumentarfilms

Contexte et analyse


Plan of the placement of the groups at the morning celebration (Grafik: Kohler)

The silent 16mm color film with a length of almost 1 ½ minutes shows a speech at the NSDAP district assembly in Bruchsal in 1938, which took place from Saturday, June 25th to Monday, June 27th, 1938. Films in color were possible from 1935 with Kodak material and from May 1937 with the German Agfacolor process, which was probably used here. According to the program, the recordings are about the NSDAP morning party, which took place on Sunday at 11.15 a.m. on the Maifeld in front of the Reichspost and for which about half an hour was scheduled. During this celebration, the flags of the German Labor Front (DAF) were consecrated, whose black uniformed bearers stand on the stands.

The film focuses entirely on what is happening on the grandstand, the back wall of which is covered with red cloth, on top of which is an oversized imperial eagle with a swastika in an oak wreath in its claws. A pan shows the SA music corps in front of the grandstand. The audience and the march of the masses are not shown. The speaker is the NSDAP functionary Emil Epp, who had been head of the Bruchsal district on a full-time basis since 1935. In this position he takes over the consecration of the flags after his address. He shakes hands with the DAF flagmen individually - which is sometimes difficult due to the large flags. The filmmaker follows him with the camera and changes the angle several times in order to be able to film the grandstand from all sides from below. At the final Hitler salute, high-ranking SA functionaries are shown on the stage, dutifully looking forward into the crowd. At the end the SA music corps is shown again in action. “The big district meeting in 1938 was probably the most grandiose National Socialist spectacle that Bruchsal had experienced up to then” (Haus 2001, p. 128). This can only be guessed at in the recordings that have survived, as they concentrate on what is happening in the stands, which is perhaps also due to the brevity of the color material.

Speaker was the Bruchsal NSDAP district leader Emil Epp (Foto: Stadtarchiv Bruchsal A111/3)

The German Labor Front (DAF) was founded in May 1933 shortly after the unions had been broken up as a joint organization of employees and employers: "The aim of the German Labor Front is to create a real community and performance community for all Germans," it said in the on 24 October 1934 signed by Adolf Hitler on the "Nature and Aim of the German Labor Front". Under the direction of Robert Ley, the DAF was an association affiliated with the NSDAP with 22 million “Aryan” members. The largest mass organization was organized strictly according to the Führer principle in 33 districts with district and local groups. The DAF had 18 'specialist offices' with a wide variety of socio-political activities. One of these sub-organizations was the 'NS-Gemeinschaft Kraft durch Freude', which offered DAF members leisure activities such as vacations, cruises on DAF ships or the project to save money for their own car - the Volkswagen.

The DAF had had its own flags since 1934, which were based on NSDAP flags. They were red and in the middle was a black gear with 14 teeth that was outlined in white. A symbol of work. A black swastika was depicted in the gear wheel on a white background. The respective place or district name was affixed to the flag in white, Gothic letters at the top left. In the pictures, however, the usual flags are not seen in landscape format, but the grandstand flags in portrait format. The red DAF flags are the dominant element on the stage at the NSDAP district assembly in Bruchsal next to the huge imperial eagle. The black uniformed members of the DAF are positioned in the stands behind the decorated lectern. The filmmaker shoots consistently from the area in front of the stage and shows the action from below from the viewer's point of view, which he does not show once. In order to motivate factories and businesses to do outstanding work in line with the Nazi ideology, the honorary title for National Socialist model businesses was introduced in September 1936. They received special flags with a golden cogwheel outlined in black; the swastika was also outlined in light. This special honor was given for one year.

Documents from the General State Archives in Karlsruhe on the NSDAP district assembly 1939, a year later, it can be seen that the district organizer and district chairman of the DAF contacted all managers of the city of Bruchsal on June 20, 1939 to ensure that they "[...] how in the past year - closed [...] take part in the rally on the Mai-Feld (opposite the Reichspost). ”The managers were also urged to advocate for the most holistic participation possible, not least because the district council was a“ powerful [s] Confession for the National Socialist People's Community and for the Führer himself ”.

Elaine Kohler

Personnages identifiés


Epp, Emil

Lieux ou monuments


Bruchsal; Schloss Bruchsal; Gasthof zum Krokodil

Bibliographie


FRESE, Matthias, Betriebspolitik im „Dritten Reich“: Deutsche Arbeitsfront, Unternehmer und Staatsbürokratie in der westdeutschen Großindustrie 1933–1939. Schöningh: Paderborn 1991; GENERALLANDESARCHIV KARLSRUHE, Kreistag in Bruchsal, Kreistag der NSDAP-Großkundgebung / 1939, Bestand 344 Nr. 6958: Die Deutsche Arbeitsfront / Kreisverwaltung Bruchsal (20. 06.1939): Schreiben betreffend Kreistag der NSDAP – Groß-Kundgebung; 2. Kreistag 1939 - Morgenfeier und Großkundgebung, Maifeld; HAUS, Alexia Kira, Bruchsal und der Nationalsozialismus. Geschichte einer nordbadischen Stadt in den Jahren 1918-1940. Verlag Regionalkultur: Ubstadt-Weiher 2001; KOSHOFER, Gert, Agfacolor – Geschichte eines Farbverfahrens: https://www.filmportal.de/thema/agfacolor-geschichte-eines-farbverfahrens (konsultiert 30.11.2020); Programmbroschüre „Kreistag der NSDAP Bruchsal 25.-27. Juni 1938“. In: Stadtarchiv Bruchsal. Kreistag der NSDAP, Bruchsal / 25. – 27. Juni 1938, Bestand A 111/3; SIEGEL, TILLA, Leistung und Lohn in der nationalsozialistischen „Ordnung der Arbeit“. In: Schriften des Zentralinstituts für sozialwiss. Forschung der FU Berlin, Band 57. Springer: Wiesbaden 1989; WEBER, Klaus (16.9.2015): Die Deutsche Arbeitsfront (DAF): https://www.dhm.de/lemo/kapitel/ns-regime/ns-organisationen/deutsche-arbeitsfront.html (konsultiert 30.11.2020).



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