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  2. English Translation of “STÜRMER” | The official Collins German-English Dictionary online. Over 100,000 English translations of German words and phrases.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Der_StürmerDer Stürmer - Wikipedia

    Der Stürmer (pronounced [deːɐ̯ ˈʃtʏʁmɐ]; literally, "The Stormer / Stormtrooper / Attacker") was a weekly German tabloid-format newspaper published from 1923 to the end of World War II by Julius Streicher, the Gauleiter of Franconia, with brief suspensions in publication due to legal difficulties. It was a significant part of Nazi ...

    • First Published
    • The Appeal of Der Stuermer
    • The Displays in Der Stuermer
    • The End
    • Resources and Further Reading

    Der Stuermer was first published on April 20, 1923. The first few editions of the Nazi weekly lacked many of the central elements that were to make Der Stuermer so popular and so notorious; they consisted of four small pages, focused on Julius Streicher's (the paper's founder and editor) political enemies (rather than against Jews), offered few if ...

    Streicher wanted Der Stuermer to appeal to the common man, to the worker with little time to read. Thus, Der Stuermer'sarticles used short sentences and a simple vocabulary. Ideas were repeated. Headlines grabbed a reader's attention. And the cartoons were easily understood. Though Der Stuermer had already published a few cartoons, they were not we...

    Though Der Stuermer began with a circulation of only a few thousand, by 1927 it had reached 14,000 copies weekly, and by 1938 had reached nearly 500,000. But the circulation figures do not account for the number of people who actually read Der Stuermer. Besides being sold at newsstands, Der Stuermer was put up on display in specially constructed di...

    Though the circulation of Der Stuermerhad continued to rise during the 1930s, by 1940, the circulation was dropping. Some part of the blame is given to paper shortages but others say the attraction for the paper lessened with the disappearance of Jews from everyday life.* The paper continued to be printed throughout the war, with its final edition ...

    Bytwerk, Randall L. "Der Stuermer: 'A Fierce and Filthy Rag,'" Julius Streicher. New York: Stein and Day, 1983.
    Showalter, Dennis E. Little Man, What Now?: Der Stuermer in the Weimar Republic. Hamden, Connecticut: The Shoe String Press Inc., 1982.
    * Randall L. Bytwerk, "Der Stuermer: 'A Fierce and Filthy Rag,'" Julius Streicher (New York: Stein and Day, 1983) 63.
    • Jennifer Rosenberg
  4. exp. the forwards kept coming up against a solid line of def [...] die Stürmer liefen sic [...] ***. 'Stürmer' also found in translations in English-German dictionary. the forwards charged the defence. exp. die Stürmer griffen die Deckung an.

  5. The aim of Der Stürmer was to attack, denounce, and promote discrimination against Jews in every way possible. In the 1920s, Streicher's anti-Semitic publication elicited many charges of libel and slander, for which he, as publisher, editor, and author, served a total of eight months in prison. Other anti-Semitic Nazis may be more notorious ...

  6. Caricatures from Der Stürmer: 1933-1945. Caricatures from. Der Stürmer. : 1933-1945. Title: Away with Him. The long arm of the Ministry of Education pulls a Jewish teacher from his classroom. March 1933 (Issue #12) This cartoon was published five months after Hitler took power. The title is “Revenge.”.

  7. Artifact. Der Stuermer, number 29, July 1934. Nazi Germany’s semi-official and fiercely antisemitic newspaper Der Stuermer warned of a Jewish program for world domination in this 1934 issue. The article—titled “Who is the Enemy?”—blamed Jews for destroying social order and claimed that Jews wanted war, while the rest of the world ...

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