Article contents
Prophet of a Partitioned World: Ferdinand Fried, “Great Spaces,” and the Dialectics of Deglobalization, 1929–1950
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2020
Abstract
Historical scholarship on “great spaces,” a central concept in the political thought of Nazi Germany, has previously focused on legal debates while neglecting important economic contexts. The journalist Ferdinand Fried deserves to be considered one of the major economic theorists of “great spaces” in the Weimar, Nazi, and early postwar eras. Fried argued that the world economy was inexorably passing from globalization through economic nationalism to a reconstituted “world economy of great spaces.” Deglobalization, as he depicted it, was a global experience that produced similar economic and political outcomes around the world. His writings anticipated and inspired Nazi propaganda aimed at legitimizing German hegemony in Europe. His ideas, and their reception, illustrate how dialectical and global visions of history have resonated with conservative intellectuals during crises of the world economy.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press
References
1 See, for example, Lower, Wendy, Nazi Empire-Building and the Holocaust in Ukraine (Chapel Hill, 2005)Google Scholar; Mazower, Mark, Hitler's Empire: Nazi Rule in Occupied Europe (London, 2008)Google Scholar; and Baranowski, Shelley, Nazi Empire: German Colonialism and Imperialism from Bismarck to Hitler (New York, 2011)Google Scholar.
2 Mazower, Mark, Governing the World: The History of an Idea (New York, 2012), 154–5, 180–87Google Scholar.
3 Schmitt, Carl, Völkerrechtliche Großraumordnung mit Interventionsverbot für raumfremde Mächte: Ein Beitrag zum Reichsbegriff im Völkerrecht (Berlin, 1939), published in April 1939Google Scholar; Schmitt, , “Großraum gegen Universalismus: Der völkerrechtliche Kampf um die Monroedoktrin,” Zeitschrift der Akademie für Deutsches Recht 6/7 (May 1939), 333–7Google Scholar.
4 See, for example, Schmoeckel, Mathias, Die Großraumtheorie: Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Völkerrechtswissenschaft im Dritten Reich, insbesondere der Kriegszeit (Berlin, 1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stirk, Peter, “Carl Schmitt's Völkerrechtliche Grossraumordnung,” History of Political Thought 20/2 (1999), 357–74Google Scholar; Carty, Anthony, “Carl Schmitt's Critique of Liberal International Legal Order between 1933 and 1945,” Leiden Journal of International Law 14/1 (2001), 25–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Voigt, Rüdiger, ed., Großraum-Denken: Carl Schmitts Kategorie der Großraumordnung (Stuttgart, 2008)Google Scholar.
5 For a characterization of contemporary events in terms of a “dialectical development,” leading “from world economic freedom to autarkic closure of individual national economies and from there, again, to the emergence of economic great spaces,” see Surányi-Unger, Theo, “Der Kampf um die Grossraumwirtschaft,” Zeitschrift für die gesamte Staatswissenschaft 101/3 (1941), 417–47, at 426Google Scholar, original emnphasis.
6 Teichert, Eckart, Autarkie und Großraumwirtschaft in Deutschland 1930–1939: Außenwirtschaftspolitische Konzeptionen zwischen Wirtschaftskrise und Zweitem Weltkrieg (Munich, 1984)Google Scholar; Wendt, Bernd-Jürgen, “Nationalsozialistische Großraumwirtschaft zwischen Utopie und Wirklichkeit: Zum Scheitern einer Konzeption 1938/39,” in Knipping, Franz and Müller, Klaus-Jürgen, eds., Machtbewußtsein in Deutschland am Vorabend des Zweiten Weltkrieges (Paderborn, 1984), 223–45Google Scholar; Volkmann, Hans-Erich, “The National Socialist Economy in Preparation for War,” in Research Institute for Military History, ed., Germany and the Second World War (Oxford, 1990), 1: 161–372Google Scholar; Gross, Stephen G., Export Empire: German Soft Power in Southeastern Europe, 1890–1945 (Cambridge, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
7 On the theory of “great-space economy” see Achim Bay, “Der nationalsozialistische Gedanke der Großraumwirtschaft und seine ideologischen Grundlagen: Darstellung und Kritik” (Ph.D. thesis, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 1962); Opitz, Reinhard, ed., Europastrategien des deutschen Kapitals 1900–1945 (Cologne, 1977)Google Scholar; and Dreier, Horst, “Wirtschaftsraum—Großraum—Lebensraum: Facetten eines belasteten Begriffs,” in Jestaedt, Matthias and Paulson, Stanley L., eds., Staatsrecht in Demokratie und Diktatur: Studien zur Weimarer Republik und zum Nationalsozialismus (Tübingen, 2016), 299–343Google Scholar.
8 This formulation of the task of global history can be found in Conrad, Sebastian, What Is Global History? (Princeton, 2016), 11CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
9 Lebovics, Herman, Social Conservatism and the Middle Classes in Germany, 1914–1933 (Princeton, 1969), chap. 6CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Schildt, Axel, “Deutschlands Platz in einem ‘christlichen Abendland’: Konservative Publizisten aus dem Tat-Kreis in der Kriegs- und Nachkriegszeit,” in Koebner, Thomas, Sautermeister, Gert, and Schneider, Sigrid, eds., Deutschland nach Hitler: Zukunftspläne im Exil und aus der Besatzungszeit 1939–1949 (Opladen, 1987), 344–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
10 Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt, Friedrich Zimmermann, Personalfragebogen für Mitarbeiter, “Kurzer Lebenslauf,” 28 Sept. 1934, BArch R 9361 III/233611; Reichsschrifttumskammer, Friedrich Zimmermann, “Lebenslauf,” 9 Oct. 1940, BArch R 9361 V/12205; Fried's interrogation at Nuremberg, “Vernehmung des Friedrich Zimmermann durch Mr. Katscher,” 21 May 1947, National Archives Microfilm Publication M1019, Roll 81, frames 668–78; Sontheimer, Kurt, “Der Tatkreis,” Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte 7/3 (1959), 229–60, at 243–4 n. 24Google Scholar; Demant, Ebbo, Von Schleicher zu Springer: Hans Zehrer als politischer Publizist (Mainz, 1971), 18, 29–35, 57–62Google Scholar.
11 Fried, Ferdinand, Das Ende des Kapitalismus (Jena, 1931)Google Scholar; Fried, , Autarkie (Jena, 1932)Google Scholar. On the reception of his Weimar-era writings see Sontheimer, “Der Tatkreis,” 241–3. Interest in Fried's work extended as far as the Statistical Department of the Reichsbank, which produced memoranda analyzing and refuting his conclusions. See “Technik und Kapitalismus,” 22 Nov. 1932, BArch R 2501/6502, pp. 325–32; and “Ferdinand Fried: ‘Autarkie’,” 21 Dec. 1932, BArch R 2501/6503, pp. 1–24.
12 Ottmann, Henning, Geschichte des politischen Denkens, vol. 4, part 1 (Stuttgart, 2010), 288CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Isaiah Berlin to Geoffrey Faber, 4 Jan. 1932, in Berlin, Isaiah, Flourishing: Letters 1928–1946, ed. Hardy, Henry (London, 2004), 638–42Google Scholar. Faber and Faber decided not to commission an English translation.
13 Barkai, Avraham, Nazi Economics: Ideology, Theory, and Policy, trans. Hadass-Vashitz, Ruth (New Haven, 1990), 69Google Scholar.
14 “Kurzer Lebenslauf,” 28 Sept. 1934, BArch R 9361 III/233611.
15 Reichsnährstand, Personalakten, Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch R 16/6981; “Kurzer Lebenslauf,” 28 Sept. 1934, BArch R 9361 III/233611; “Lebenslauf,” 9 Oct. 1940, BArch R 9361 V/12205. See Herferth, Wilhelm, “Der faschistische ‘Reichsnährstand’ und die Stellung seiner Funktionäre im Bonner Staat,” Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft 10 (1962), 1046–76, at 1059–60Google Scholar.
16 Fried, Ferdinand, Die Zukunft des Außenhandels: Durch innere Marktordnung zur Außenhandelsfreiheit (Jena, 1934)Google Scholar. See Tooze, Adam, The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy (London, 2006), 189Google Scholar.
17 He joined the NSDAP in 1940. Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt, Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch R 9361 III/233611; SS-Führerpersonalakten, Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch R 9361 III/565432.
18 Similar ideas could be found in Sombart, Werner, “Die Wandlungen des Kapitalismus,” Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv 28 (1928), 243–56Google Scholar. On Fried as a popularizer of Sombart's ideas see Lebovics, Social Conservatism, 184–5.
19 Fried, Das Ende des Kapitalismus, 7. His skepticism about the transformative possibilities of early twentieth-century technology has parallels in recent reflections about twenty-first-century productivity stagnation. See Gordon, Robert J., The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living since the Civil War (Princeton, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
20 Fried, Das Ende des Kapitalismus, 127–54.
21 Ibid., 168–70; Fried, Autarkie, 12–13. In reality, Britain was more affected by the industrialization of the non-European world than were other exporting countries. On the whole, the global division of labor did not change dramatically during the interwar period. James, Harold, The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression (Cambridge, MA, 2001), 106–7Google Scholar; Findlay, Ronald and O'Rourke, Kevin H., Power and Plenty: Trade, War, and the World Economy in the Second Millenium (Princeton, 2007), 437–9, 461–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Graff, Michael, Kenwood, A. G., and Lougheed, A. L., Growth of the International Economy, 1820–2015, 5th edn (Abingdon, 2014), 204–6Google Scholar.
22 On Fried's views about Engels and Marx, and the latter's “racial peculiarity,” see Fried, Das Ende des Kapitalismus, 113. On the middle classes see ibid., 82–108, 120, 166–7; and Fried, Ferdinand, “Der mittlere Unternehmer,” Die Tat 21/11 (Feb. 1930), 806–23Google Scholar. See also Lebovics, Social Conservatism, 198–9 n. 71; and Muller, Jerry Z., The Mind and the Market: Capitalism in Modern European Thought (New York, 2002), 180Google Scholar.
23 Fried, Ferdinand, “Wo stehen wir?”, Die Tat 23/5 (Aug. 1931), 354–85, at 383–4Google Scholar; Fried, , “Der Umbau der Wirtschaft,” Die Tat 24/6 (Sept. 1932), 452–67Google Scholar.
24 Fried, Das Ende des Kapitalismus, 255–65; Fried, Autarkie, 46–8, 53–7, 61–117, 127–9, 133–4, 148–55. See Hock, Wolfgang, Deutscher Antikapitalismus: Der ideologische Kampf gegen die freie Wirtschaft im Zeichen der großen Krise (Frankfurt am Main, 1960), 58Google Scholar. On late Weimar and early Nazi trade policy see Gross, Export Empire, 162–9, 186–92.
25 For “Großraum” see Wirsing, Giselher, “Richtung Ost-Südost!”, Die Tat 22/8 (Nov. 1930), 628–45, at 634Google Scholar; for “Großraumwirtschaft” see Fried, “Wo stehen wir?”, 384.
26 Fried, Autarkie, 126, original emphasis.
27 See Neitzel, Sönke, Weltmacht oder Untergang: Die Weltreichslehre im Zeitalter des Imperialismus (Paderborn, 2000)Google Scholar; Bell, Duncan, The Idea of Greater Britain: Empire and the Future of World Order, 1860–1900 (Princeton, 2007)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Beckert, Sven, “American Danger: United States Empire, Eurafrica, and the Territorialization of Industrial Capitalism, 1870–1950,” American Historical Review 122/4 (2017), 1137–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
28 Fried, Autarkie, 25, 40–41, 53, 126, 138–42. For a summary of the Ottawa Agreements see Glickman, David L., “The British Imperial Preference System,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 61/3 (1947), 439–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The ultimate effects were more modest for Britain than Fried suggested. Between 1928 and 1938 the fraction of British exports absorbed by its empire increased from 44 percent to 50 percent, while the fraction of British imports derived from its empire increased from 30 percent to 42 percent. More significant reorientations of trade took place between France and its empire, between Japan and its empire, and between Germany, Southeastern Europe, and Latin America. See Eichengreen, Barry and Irwin, Douglas A., “Trade Blocs, Currency Blocs and the Reorientation of World Trade in the 1930s,” Journal of International Economics 38 (1995), 1–24, at 4–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Findlay and O'Rourke, Power and Plenty, 460–61.
29 For a variety of interpretations see Gürge, Wilhelm and Grotkopp, Wilhelm, eds., Großraumwirtschaft: Der Weg zur europäischen Einheit (Berlin, 1931)Google Scholar; “Großraumwirtschaft,” Der Neue Brockhaus (Leipzig, 1937), 2: 296; Daitz, Werner, Der Weg zur völkischen Wirtschaft: Ausgewählte Reden und Aufsätze (Munich, 1938)Google Scholar; Thiele, Walter, Großraumwirtschaft in Geschichte und Politik (Dresden, 1938)Google Scholar; and Helmuth Wohlthat, “Großräume und Meistbegünstigung,” Die deutsche Volkswirtschaft, 23 Dec. 1938, 536–40.
30 Krüger, Karl, Deutsche Großraumwirtschaft (Hamburg, 1932), 12, 35, 43, 48Google Scholar; Grävell, Walter, “Nationalwirtschaft, Großraumwirtschaft, Weltwirtschaft,” Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 27/1 (Oct. 1933), 99–113, at 112Google Scholar; and the comments by the state secretary in the Ministry of Economics, Posse, H. E., “Großraum-Wirtschaft in deutscher Handelspolitik,” Die Bank 28/1 (2 Jan. 1935), 15–17, at 16Google Scholar.
31 Reichsnährstand, Personalakten, Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch R 16/6981; Friedrich Zimmermann to the Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt SS, 15 Jan. 1936, BArch R 9361 III/233611; “Lebenslauf,” 9 Oct. 1940, BArch R 9361 V/12205.
32 “I released you from the organization of [my] Staff Office so that you could dedicate yourself to fundamental problems without impediment,” Darré noted. R. Walther Darré to Friedrich Zimmermann, 27 March 1939, NL Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch N 1208, Nr. 1, p. 24.
33 Fried, Ferdinand, Der Aufstieg der Juden (Goslar, 1937), 9Google Scholar; Fried, Latifundien vernichteten Rom! (Goslar, 1938).
34 Friedrich Zimmermann to Eugen Diederichs Verlag, 7 April 1938, A:Diederichs, Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach.
35 Fried, Ferdinand, Wende der Weltwirtschaft (Leipzig, 1939), 7Google Scholar. The date of first publication appears on the copyright page of the book's second printing.
36 Schmitt was an enthusiastic reader of Die Tat and socialized with Fried and Zehrer at Werner Sombart's house in the early 1930s. Fritzsche, Klaus, Politische Romantik und Gegenrevolution. Fluchtwege in der Krise der bürgerlichen Gesellschaft: Das Beispiel des ‘Tat’-Kreises (Frankfurt am Main, 1976), 57Google Scholar; Carl Schmitt, diary entry for 22 April 1932, in Schmitt, Tagebücher 1930–1934, ed. Wolfgang Schuller in cooperation with Gerd Giesler (Berlin, 2010), 188–9.
37 Schmitt, Völkerrechtliche Großraumordnung, 23, 35.
38 Ibid., 37–9, 43–4, 53–4.
39 Schmitt, “Großraum gegen Universalismus,” 334–6.
40 Fried, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, 163–81.
41 Ibid., 111–23. Fried drew on contemporary analyses by Robertson, D. H., “The Future of International Trade,” Economic Journal 48/189 (1938), 1–14CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Jacks, G. V. and Whyte, R. O., The Rape of the Earth: A World Survey of Soil Erosion (London, 1939)Google Scholar.
42 Fried, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, 26, 29–30. On the theory of hegemonic stability see Gilpin, Robert, Global Political Economy: Understanding the International Economic Order (Princeton, 2001), chap. 4CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
43 Fried, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, 13, 38–9, 202–8.
44 Ibid., 77, 208–9, 224, 301–4, 419, 422–3.
45 Ibid., 393, 423–4.
46 Ibid., 322.
47 Ibid., 303–4, 347, quotation at 315.
48 Ibid., 322–3.
49 Ibid., 310–72.
50 Ibid., 302–3, 305, 308, 310, 324–5.
51 Fried had first discussed this possibility in Ferdinand Fried. Zimmermann, “Die Überwindung des Kapitalismus,” Odal 5/12 (June 1937), 959–75, at 961–2.
52 Fried, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, 434–5.
53 Ibid., 231–3.
54 Ibid., 303, 435–8.
55 Ibid., 420, 438.
56 Ibid., 442.
57 Ibid., 439, 442.
58 Ibid., 447.
59 Ibid., 30–31, 196.
60 His contemporary, Werner Daitz, would subsequently divide the world into “living spaces” defined by unique racial groups. See Daitz, Werner, “Neuordnung Europas aus Rasse und Raum,” Nationalsozialistische Monatshefte 11/126 (Sept. 1940), 529–34Google Scholar.
61 Fried, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, 302.
62 Hitler, Adolf, Mein Kampf, trans. Manheim, Ralph (Boston, 1999), 140–44Google Scholar; Weinberg, Gerhard L., ed., Hitler's Second Book: The Unpublished Sequel to Mein Kampf, trans. Smith, Krista (New York, 2006), 23–7, 74–9, 158–9, 231–2Google Scholar. In September 1941, Hitler told Otto Abetz, Germany's ambassador to Vichy France, “Europe will cover its entire demand for raw materials itself and have its own export market in the Russian space, so that we will no longer need the rest of world trade.” Akten zur deutschen auswärtigen Politik 1918–1945, series D, vol. XIII-2 (Göttingen, 1970), Nr. 327, 423–5, at 425. See Thies, Jochen, Hitler's Plans for Global Domination: Nazi Architecture and Ultimate War Aims, trans. Cooke, Ian and Friedrich, Mary-Beth (New York, 2012), 164, 173–4Google Scholar.
63 Deutsche Reichsbank, Volkswirtschaftliche Abteilung, “Probleme der äußeren Währungspolitik nach Beendigung des Krieges,” 20 June 1940, BArch R 2501/7015, 66–83, at 67–8.
64 Walther Funk, “Die wirtschaftliche Neuordnung Europas” (26 July 1940), Monatshefte für Auswärtige Politik 7/8 (Aug. 1940), 630–36, at 632–3.
65 Kletzin, Birgit, Europa aus Rasse und Raum: Die nationalsozialistische Idee der Neuen Ordnung (Münster, 2000), 201–9Google Scholar; Link, Stefan, “How Might 21st-Century De-globalization Unfold? Some Historical Reflections,” New Global Studies 12/3 (2018), 343–65, at 360–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
66 Fried, Ferdinand, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, rev. edn (Leipzig, 1940)Google Scholar.
67 Fried, Ferdinand, “Die Weltwirtschaft der Großräume,” Das XX. Jahrhundert 2/8 (Nov. 1940), 311–18Google Scholar. An expanded version of the article was published as Fried, Die Zukunft des Welthandels (Munich, 1941).
68 On the German Library of Information see Frye, Alton, Nazi Germany and the American Hemisphere 1933–1941 (New Haven, 1967), 83, 94, 97, 145, 162Google Scholar.
69 “A Birdseye View of World Economy,” Facts in Review 3/13 (10 April 1941), 182–3.
70 On the maps see Strausz-Hupé, Robert, Geopolitics: The Struggle for Space and Power (New York, 1942), 121–3Google Scholar; O'Loughlin, John and van der Wusten, Herman, “Political Geography of Panregions,” Geographical Review 80/1 (1990), 1–20, at 5–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Maier, Charles S., Once within Borders: Territories of Power, Wealth, and Belonging since 1500 (Cambridge, MA, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, pictorial insert.
71 Backe, Herbert, Um die Nahrungsfreiheit Europas: Weltwirtschaft oder Großraum (Leipzig, 1942)Google Scholar. The book was completed in September 1941.
72 Ibid., 9.
73 Ibid., 14–16, 31–106, 209–26, quotation at 217.
74 R. Walther Darré to [Friedrich] Zimmermann, undated (late 1947), BArch NL Friedrich Zimmermann, N 1208, Nr. 1, p. 21. Backe's book was “almost certainly ghosted,” according to Tooze, Wages of Destruction, 712 n. 22.
75 Fried received an appointment as honorary professor at the German university in Prague, to which he commuted to deliver lectures on economics between fall 1941 and spring 1943. Der Kurator der deutschen wissenschaftlichen Hochschulen in Prag, Professor Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch R 31/710; Ferdinand Fried. Zimmermann to Fritz Kranefuß, 24 June 1942, BArch NS 21/2732. See his inaugural lecture, Ferdinand Fried, Die geistigen Grundlagen der weltwirtschaftlichen Strukturwandlung (Stuttgart, 1941).
76 Alfred Haußner, “Weltwirtschaft von gestern und morgen. Von Ferdinand Fried erläutert. Zu einem Bucherfolg,” Münchner Neueste Nachrichten, 23 Feb. 1941, Wochenbeilage, “Aus Literatur und Leben”; “Wende der Weltwirtschaft,” Europäische Revue 16/5 (May 1940), 294–5, at 295, original emphasis.
77 Schöttler, Peter, “Fernand Braudel as Prisoner in Germany: Confronting the Long Term and the Present Time,” in Pathé, Anne-Marie and Théofilakis, Fabien, eds., Wartime Captivity in the Twentieth Century: Archives, Stories, Memories, trans. McPhail, Helen (New York, 2016), 103–14CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
78 Braudel, Fernand, “Géohistoire: La sociéte, l'espace et le temps,” in Braudel, Les ambitions de l'histoire, ed. de Ayala, Roselyne and Braudel, Paule (Paris, 1997), 68–114, at 93–5Google Scholar.
79 Fernand Braudel, “L'histoire à la recherche du monde,” in Braudel, Les ambitions de l'histoire, 51–67, at 57. Braudel was likely quoting Fried's enjoinment to seek “the deeper meaning in all the overwhelming events.” Fried, Wende der Weltwirtschaft, 8.
80 On Röpke and neoliberalism see Burgin, Angus, The Great Persuasion: Reinventing Free Markets since the Depression (Cambridge, MA, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Slobodian, Quinn, Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism (Cambridge, MA, 2018)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
81 Ulrich Unfried, “The Intellectuals and ‘Capitalism’” (1931), in Röpke, Wilhelm, Against the Tide, trans. Henderson, Elizabeth (Chicago, 1969), 25–44Google Scholar; Röpke, “The Secular Significance of the World Crisis” (1933), in ibid., 45–77; Röpke, “Autarkie: ein abgenutztes Schlagwort,” Der deutsche Volkswirt 7/1 (6 Jan. 1933), 437–9. See Hennecke, Hans Jörg, Wilhelm Röpke: Ein Leben in der Brandung (Stuttgart, 2005), 79–80, 149–51Google Scholar.
82 W.R. [Wilhelm Röpke], “Wende der Weltwirtschaft I.,” Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 29 May 1941 (Abendausgabe), Blatt 5.
83 W.R. [Wilhelm Röpke], “Wende der Weltwirtschaft II.,” Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 30 May 1941 (Morgenausgabe), Blatt 2.
84 W.R. [Wilhelm Röpke], “Wende der Weltwirtschaft III.,” Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 30 May 1941 (Abendausgabe), Blatt 6.
85 Ferdinand Fried, “‘Dritter Weg’ der Weltwirtschaft,” Münchner Neueste Nachrichten, 17 June 1941, 1–2, at 1.
86 Fried's denazification file contains a list of his lecture destinations, “Extrabogen zu G: Veröffentlichungen,” Fragebogen, 6 Nov. 1946, as well as a copy of the exchange between Fried and Ohlin, “Tyska storrumstesen och Sverige: Ett meningsutbyte,” Stockholms-Tidningen, 6 May 1943, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
87 Fried, Ferdinand, “Die Probleme der Weltwirtschaft,” Mitteilungen der Deutschen Handelskammer in Schweden 9 (1943), 111–24, at 117–19Google Scholar. Fried spoke to the German chamber of commerce in Stockholm on 5 March 1943.
88 Ibid., 120. Condliffe did not wish for this extreme outcome, which he associated with a German victory, though he did expect to see the economic sovereignty of smaller states diminished after the war. Condliffe, J. B., The Reconstruction of World Trade (New York, 1940), 366Google Scholar, see also 368–9, 382. In his review of Turning Point of the World Economy, Röpke had conspicuously praised Condliffe as a more reliable economic commentator than Fried. See Röpke, “Wende der Weltwirtschaft II.”
89 Condliffe, The Reconstruction of World Trade, 394. Fried cited this passage in his lecture at the German chamber of commerce in Zurich on 17 May 1943, Fried, “Zukunft der Weltwirtschaft,” 28. The lecture's publication was blocked by the Swiss censor on account of its propagandistic nature. I am grateful to Stefan Andreas Keller for providing me with a copy of the unpublished page proofs from the Swiss archives. See Keller, Stefan Andreas, Im Gebiet des Unneutralen: Schweizerische Buchzensur im Zweiten Weltkrieg zwischen Nationalsozialismus und Geistiger Landesverteidigung (Zurich, 2009), 142–7Google Scholar.
90 Fried, Ferdinand, “Gegliederte Weltwirtschaft,” Das XX. Jahrhundert 5/3 (March 1943), 105–8, at 106–7Google Scholar; Fried, “Die Probleme der Weltwirtschaft,” 117; Fried, “Zukunft der Weltwirtschaft,” 18–19.
91 Walter Tießler to Joseph Goebbels, 3 Sept. 1942, BArch NS 18/615, pp. 8–9. On Tießler's career see Bytwerk, Randall L., “Grassroots Propaganda in the Third Reich: The Reich Ring for National Socialist Propaganda and Public Enlightenment,” German Studies Review 33/1 (2010), 93–118Google Scholar.
92 Walter Tießler, “Notiz an die Abteilung Rundfunk, im Propagandaministerium. Sache: Verwendung der Begriffe ‘Grossraum’ und ‘Grossraumwirtschaft’,” 4 Dec. 1942, BArch NS 18/615, p. 2; “Richtlinien über die Verwendung der Begriffe ‘Grossraumpolitik’ und ‘Grossraumwirtschaft’,” 3 Dec. 1942, BArch NS 18/615, p. 3.
93 Fried, Ferdinand, Die soziale Revolution: Verwandlung von Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft (Leipzig, 1942), 46–7Google Scholar.
94 “Organisierter Massenwahn?”, Nationalsozialistische Wirtschaftspolitik, 25 March 1943, 67–70, BArch Bibliothek NSD 3/11.
95 Hans Schumann, “Ein falscher Prophet,” in ibid., 76–9, at 77.
96 Testimonial from Gerhard Herrmann, director of the Wilhelm Goldmann Verlag, 25 Oct. 1946; Friedrich Zimmermann, “Lebenslauf,” 6 Jan. 1948; Friedrich Zimmermann, “Politischer Lebenslauf,” undated, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
97 Headquarters Ninth Infantry Division, Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff G-2, CI Screening Staff Civilian Internment Camp 15, APO 9, “Subject: Zimmermann Friedrich 15 – 1467,” 18 Feb. 1946, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
98 “Vernehmung des Friedrich Zimmermann durch Dr. R. M. W. Kempner,” 22 May 1947, M1019/81/681.
99 Ibid., M1019/81/680, M1019/81/682. Both Fried and Schmitt were interrogated by Kempner as potential witnesses for the prosecution at Nuremberg. See Quaritsch, Helmut, ed., Carl Schmitt: Antworten in Nürnberg (Berlin, 2000)Google Scholar.
100 Ferdinand Friedrich Zimmermann, “Eidesstattliche Erklaerung,” 9 Aug. 1948, BArch All. Proz. 1 Rep. 501/LVI Weizsäcker Abt. F 9, Darré-Dokumenten-Buch VI, Darré-Dokument Nr IA 16d., pp. 47–53, at 50–51, 52.
101 Robert M. W. Kempner to Chief Public Prosecutor Bark, Internment and Labor Camp Regensburg, 23 May 1947; Klageschrift, 31 July 1947, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
102 Alfons Vodermayer, “Bestätigung,” 13 Oct. 1946; Alfons Pallauf, “Erklärung,” 14 Oct. 1946, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
103 Testimony of Kurt Sendtner, “Protokoll der öffentlichen Sitzung,” 9 Feb. 1948; Franz Reuter, “Erklärung,” 24 Jan. 1947, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
104 Spruch, 9 Feb. 1948, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
105 Ferdinand Fried to Ernst Jünger, 16 March 1948, A:Jünger, Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach; Entlassungsschein, 2 April 1948, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
106 Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Sonderaufgaben, “Entschliessung. Betr.: Zimmermann Friedrich, Törwang,” 9 Nov. 1948; Hauptkammer München, Außenstelle Rosenheim, Spruch, 15 July 1949, Staatsarchiv München, Spruchkammerakten Karton 2045, Zimmermann Friedrich.
107 “Zur Person: Franz-Josef Strauß im Gespräch mit Günter Gaus,” 29 April 1964, 12:50–13:40, at www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpfA-d_YeGc, accessed 21 March 2020. I am grateful to Ernst Herb for this reference.
108 Ferdinand Fried. Zimmermann to Richard Walther Darré, 29 May 1946, NL Richard Walther Darré, BArch N 1094I, Nr. 19.
109 Fried, Ferdinand, Wandlungen der Weltwirtschaft (Munich, 1950), 6Google Scholar.
110 Ibid., 287. His support for a “European Union” was further thematized in Fried, Ferdinand, Das Abendteuer des Abendlandes (Düsseldorf, 1950), 224–6, 234–40Google Scholar.
111 Fried, Wandlungen der Weltwirtschaft, 272.
112 Ferdinand Fried, “Neue Wende in der Weltwirtschaft,” Münchner Merkur, 24–6 Dec. 1952, 19.
113 On the discussion of regionalism in Allied countries see Rosenboim, Or, The Emergence of Globalism: Visions of World Order in Britain and the United States, 1939–1950 (Princeton, 2017)Google Scholar.
114 Fried, Wandlungen der Weltwirtschaft, 285.
115 Ibid., 267–8.
116 Ibid., 286, 292–3.
117 See Schmitt, Carl, “Die Einheit der Welt,” Merkur 6/1 (Jan. 1952), 1–11Google Scholar, which he sent as an offprint to Fried on 10 May 1952. NL Friedrich Zimmermann, BArch N 1208, Nr. 9.
118 Payk, Markus M., “A Post-liberal Order? Hans Zehrer and Conservative Consensus Building in 1950s West Germany,” Modern Intellectual History 9/3 (2012), 681–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
119 Fried, Ferdinand, “Das Geschäft mit dem Osten,” Zeitschrift für Geopolitik 22/2 (Feb. 1951), 106–15Google Scholar; Fried, “Die These von der Krisis des Kapitalismus,” Münchner Merkur, 8 Oct. 1952, 9; Fried, “Boykott gegen die Sowjetunion?,” Sonntagsblatt, 25 Nov. 1956, 24.
120 Ferdinand Fried, “Wem nützt der Osthandel?,” Die Welt, 1 July 1961, 1–2; Fried, “Der rote Handel lockt …,” Die Welt, 27 Jan. 1962, 11; Fried, “Russenöl im Anmarsch,” Die Welt, 24 March 1962, 11.
121 Poliakov, Léon and Wulf, Josef, eds., Das Dritte Reich und seine Denker: Dokumente (Berlin, 1959), 368Google Scholar.
122 Kohlmey, Gunther, Der demokratische Weltmarkt: Entstehung, Merkmale und Bedeutung für den sozialistischen Aufbau ([East] Berlin, 1956), 67–8Google Scholar; Heyden, Günter, Kritik der deutschen Geopolitik: Wesen und soziale Funktion einer reaktionären soziologischen Schule ([East] Berlin, 1959), 245–7Google Scholar. His Stasi file characterized Turning Point of the World Economy as an attempt to “provide the theoretical foundation for the fascist claim to dominance over the nations of Central Europe,” and condemned The Rise of the Jews for having helped “ideologically prepare” the murder of European Jews. Der Bundesbeauftragte für die Unterlagen des Staatssicherheitsdienstes der ehemaligen Deutschen Demokratischen Republik, MfS AP 11805/69, pp. 4, 7, 14.
123 Werner Lichey, “Abschied von einem Freund,” Die Welt, 11 July 1967, 2.
124 For the liberal embrace of dialectics see Fukuyama, Francis, The End of History and the Last Man (New York, 1992)Google Scholar.
125 On European planning in Nazi Germany see Neulen, Hans Werner, Europa und das 3. Reich: Einigungsbestrebungen im deutschen Machtbereich 1939–1945 (Munich, 1987), 21–68Google Scholar.
126 Reynolds, David, One World Divisible: A Global History since 1945 (New York, 2000), 4Google Scholar, original emphasis.
127 King, Stephen D., Grave New World: The End of Globalization, the Return of History (New Haven, 2017), 239Google Scholar. The allusions are to the geopolitical blocs described in George Orwell's 1984.
- 2
- Cited by