The War in the West: Reports from the Western Front

The War in the West: Reports from the Western Front

The War in the West: Reports from the Western Front

The War in the West: Reports from the Western Front

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Overview

"I can see them standing in the sunshine, in the bright, light days. The mothers, brides and sisters; they come here to these hot fields and stand there motionless, crying quietly, still unable to comprehend that their loved ones are resting beneath this earth."
At the beginning of WWI, Bernhard Kellermann visited the German trenches in France as a correspondent for the Berlin Daily Newspaper, the 'Berliner Tageblatt'. He not only wrote about the fighting but also about the tragic cost to humanity in and behind the trenches, caused by the slaughter. He was patriotic, proud of his fellow countrymen and wanted Germany to win the war. Yet he did not shy away from expressing disbelief to his proud nation that war was being fought in the first place.
" ... two nations that gave birth to thoughts that govern the world! - Now they lie facing each other in holes in the earth, tense with the desire to kill."
In his war reports, Kellermann reflects poignantly and often poetically on the appalling carnage and the attacks he witnessed, such as those in the Argonne Forest. He also highlights the cynicism of officers on both sides and the incredible courage of soldiers in a world laid waste by human stupidity.
Kellermann's reports from the front lines present a witness's insight into the shape of war on the German side of the trenches.
Kellerman was later vilified by the Nazi regime.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798855676570
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 12/04/2023
Series: In the Trenches of WWI
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.41(d)

About the Author

Bernhard Kellermann was a German journalist and writer. He was born on the 4th of March 1879 in Fürth, Germany, and died on the 17th October 1951 in Potsdam, East Germany.
Kellermann published several war reports when he worked as a correspondent for the ‘Berliner Tageblatt’ during the First World War I. The ‘Tageblatt’ (daily newspaper) was one of Berlin’s most influential newspapers.
In 1899, Kellermann began to study at the Technical High School in Munich. Later, he decided to take courses in German philology and painting.
From 1904, the year that his novel “Yester and Li” was published and achieved huge success, he began his career as a novelist writing in the Neo-Romantic Impressionist manner.
“The 9th of November” was published in 1920. This novel was critical of the behaviour of officers and soldiers towards civilians, and later it caused Kellermann problems with the Nazis. The Nazi regime had him thrown out of the Preußische Dichterakademie (Prussian Literary Academy), which had accepted him in 1926, and his book “The 9th of November”, was banned and then burned on the streets during the Nazi campaign to ‘purify” the German language in 1933. Kellermann decided not to emigrate, biding his time until the end of the war, writing trivial novels instead.
After the war he became a representative in the Peoples Chamber (House of Representatives) in East Germany.
He is buried in the New Cemetery in Potsdam, Berlin, Germany.
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