Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Textual Note
- Abbreviations of Works Frequently Cited
- 1 The Historical Context of the Furcht und Elend Project
- 2 Brecht and Fascism
- 3 Fear and Misery in Brecht's Depiction of Third Reich Germany
- 4 “Der Widerstand, und zwar der wachsende Widerstand”: Brecht's Dramatized Typology of Forms of Opposition
- 5 Songs, Poems, and Other Commenting Devices in Furcht und Elend and The Private Life of the Master Race
- 6 Epic Structure, Alienation Effects, and Aristotelian Theater
- Concluding Remarks
- Appendix A Furcht und Elend Scene Titles and their English Equivalents
- Appendix B The First Four Verses of “Die deutsche Heerschau” in German and English
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Brecht and Fascism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Textual Note
- Abbreviations of Works Frequently Cited
- 1 The Historical Context of the Furcht und Elend Project
- 2 Brecht and Fascism
- 3 Fear and Misery in Brecht's Depiction of Third Reich Germany
- 4 “Der Widerstand, und zwar der wachsende Widerstand”: Brecht's Dramatized Typology of Forms of Opposition
- 5 Songs, Poems, and Other Commenting Devices in Furcht und Elend and The Private Life of the Master Race
- 6 Epic Structure, Alienation Effects, and Aristotelian Theater
- Concluding Remarks
- Appendix A Furcht und Elend Scene Titles and their English Equivalents
- Appendix B The First Four Verses of “Die deutsche Heerschau” in German and English
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
SUMMONED TO APPEAR before the Congress House of Representatives Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) on 30 October 1947, Brecht was at one stage of the hearing interrogated about his 1930 “Lehrstück” Die Maßnahme (The Measures Taken). Substantial attention had been paid to the work in the FBI's file on Brecht. “Would you consider the play to be pro-Communist or anti-Communist” was the unsubtle opening question he was asked, “or would it take a neutral position regarding Communists?” “In this play,” Brecht replied, “I tried to express the feelings and ideas of the German workers who then fought against Hitler.” Some surprise was expressed by the chief HUAC investigator, Robert Stripling, upon hearing that German workers were already fighting fascism at that time. “Yes, yes, oh yes,” Brecht disingenuously explained, “that fight started in 1923.” Presumably, deflecting attention from his play's revolutionary Marxism-Leninism to the possibility that it was built around an antifascist theme might have seemed a shrewd counter-move on Brecht's part. Associating Die Maßnahme exclusively with the “feelings and ideas” of a German working class fighting against National Socialism can hardly have suited HUAC's agenda. Although political activist ideas are much in evidence in some scenes of the play, Die Maßnahme in fact treats class warfare without even obliquely referring to National Socialism. But then, as Gerd Koch has pointed out (BHB 4:129), Brecht was notoriously slow to grasp the importance of Hitler's movement.
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- Information
- Bertolt Brecht's 'Furcht und Elend des Dritten Reiches'A German Exile Drama in the Struggle against Fascism, pp. 29 - 69Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2010