Willi Münzenberg’s ‘Last Empire’: Die Zukunft and the ‘Franco-German Union’, Paris, 1938 – 1940. New Visions of Anti-Fascism and the Transnational Networks of the Anti-Hitler Resistance

Bernhard H. Bayerlein
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Abstract

The weekly Die Zukunft is among the most ambitious Franco-German media projects and collective organisers with European repercussions during the final crisis of the inter-war period from the Munich Agreement in September 1938 until May 1940 and the German occupation of France during the Second World War. The reading of the political-cultural journal as a unique, last ‘anti-fascist intermediate empire’ before the outbreak of the war and the efforts made by its editor, Willi Munzenberg, to unite the transnational anti-Hitler oppositionist networks contributes to an innovative perspective on the history of the German-speaking political emigration and German-French relations. New insights require major adjustments in the history of European strategies and the anti-Stalinist shift expressed by Die Zukunft after the conclusion of the Stalin-Hitler Pact contributes to a deeper understanding of the crisis of the political exile and the first stages of World War Two. According to Munzenberg’s concept of the future, democracy and socialism were to be rethought as a European task, against the division and the dismemberment of Germany and Europe after Hitler, against the reconstruction under conditions of capitalism and against the international and domestic political arrangements of the Stalinist Soviet Union. Henceforth “peace and freedom” had to be (…) “defended against Hitler and Stalin” and further neo-imperialist arrangements. Nevertheless, the Zukunft could not prevent the definite failure of exile and resistance, which was rooted in the catastrophic defeat of the German Labour Movement in 1933, the sectarian refusal of a popular resistance of all social strata and the ties with Western democracies and their political apparatuses.
威利·梅因伯格的《最后的帝国》:祖国和“法德联盟”,巴黎,1938 - 1940。反法西斯主义的新视野和反希特勒抵抗的跨国网络
从1938年9月的《慕尼黑协定》到1940年5月的两次世界大战之间的最后危机,以及德国在第二次世界大战期间占领法国,《德国之声》周刊是最雄心勃勃的法德媒体项目和集体组织者之一,对欧洲产生了影响。将这份政治文化杂志视为战争爆发前一个独特的、最后的“反法西斯中间帝国”,以及其编辑威利·蒙森伯格(Willi Munzenberg)为联合跨国反希特勒反对派网络所做的努力,有助于以创新的视角看待德语政治移民和德法关系的历史。新的见解需要对欧洲战略的历史进行重大调整,而《祖kunft》在《斯大林-希特勒条约》签订后所表达的反斯大林主义的转变有助于更深入地理解政治流亡危机和第二次世界大战的第一阶段。根据Munzenberg对未来的概念,民主和社会主义将被重新思考为欧洲的任务,反对希特勒之后德国和欧洲的分裂和肢解,反对资本主义条件下的重建,反对斯大林主义苏联的国际和国内政治安排。从此以后,“和平与自由”必须“抵抗希特勒和斯大林”以及进一步的新帝国主义安排。然而,祖kunft无法阻止流亡和抵抗的明确失败,其根源在于1933年德国劳工运动的灾难性失败,所有社会阶层的民众抵抗的宗派拒绝以及与西方民主国家及其政治机构的联系。
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