Richard Löwenthal

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Richard Löwenthal (April 15, 1908, Berlin, Germany-August 9, 1991, Berlin, Germany) was a German journalist and professor who wrote mostly on the problems of democracy, communism, and world politics.

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[edit] Life

Löwenthal was the son of Ernst and Anna Löwenthal . His father was a real estate agent. From 1926 until 1931, Löwenthal studied political science, economics, and sociology at Berlin University and Heidelberg University. His major intellectual influences were Max Weber and Karl Mannheim. From 1926 until 1929, Löwenthal was a member of the Communist Party of Germany, which he left over opposition to the tactics of the Comintern. Remaining on the Left, Löwenthal was a member of several dissident breakaway groups from the KPD in the last years of the Weimar Republic.

In 1933 Löwenthal was a prominent member of the anti-Nazi group Neu Beginnen (New Beginnings) which sought to organize the German working class to overthrow the Nazi regime. During this period, Löwenthal adopted the alias Paul Sering. In July 1933, the New Beginnings group broke up under the impact of a huge wave of Gestapo arrests of its members. As a wanted man, Löwenthal continued to work for an anti-Nazi working-class revolution until increasing pressure from the Gestapo led Löwenthal to flee to the United Kingdom in August 1935. Subsequently Löwenthal moved to Prague, Czechoslovakia where he remained active in left-wing German émigré groups. From April 1936 until October 1937, Löwenthal worked as a researcher in London before returning to Prague. Following the Munich Agreement of 1938, Löwenthal fled to Paris, France and then in 1939 returned to London, which was to be Löwenthal’s home until 1959. During the 1930s, in his writings Löwenthal expressed strong criticism of the definition of fascism proposed by the Comintern, and in particular criticized the Comintern’s social fascism theory which held that moderate left-wing groups such as the Social Democratic Party of Germany and Labour Party were much fascist as were the Nazi Party, and if anything were more dangerous because of their “disguised” fascist nature as opposed to the “open fascism” of the Nazis. Starting in 1935, Löwenthal started to work on as his own definition of Fascism, which was strongly influenced by the work of Otto Bauer and Franz Leopold Neumann. In these writings, Löwenthal concluded that Nazi Germany was not a puppet of Big Business as the Comintern had claimed and that in fact the Nazi regime was in and of itself the supreme power in the land. During the late 1930s, Löwenthal decided that another world war was inevitable, and saw his main task as preparing the German left for that war.

During his time in Britain, Löwenthal was close to the Fabian Society and helped to publish The International Socialist Forum. From 1940 until 1942, Löwenthal served as speaker for the BBC’s German language program. In 1941, Löwenthal published a book that argued in the post-world war, it was highly necessary for the Soviet Union to be given the lion’s share of the responsibility of governing Germany after the war as the best of ensuring the triumph of the German Left. After 1943, Löwenthal disallowed this position and instead urged that the main responsibility of re-building Germany after the war be given to the Western powers, who were in Löwenthal ’s opinion the best powers for ensuring a democratic Germany. Löwenthal very much admired the Labour Party and in several articles after 1945 urged that West Germany adopted the Britain as model for it’s economic organization. In 1945, Löwenthal joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany. In his 1948 book Jenseits des Kapitalismus, Lowenthal called for a Socialist reconstruction of the European system with an especially prominent role to be allocated to Great Britain as the most progressive of the European powers[1]. An Anglophile, Lowenthal was much influenced by his time in Britain. Lowenthal was late to write that “In England the German socialist emigrants got to know an impressive model of a free democracy which proved its worth under extreme external pressure; thus they were essentially confirmed in their democratic conviction and prepared for the task that awaited them after the war. The English, at least those who lent the emigrant an ear and cooperated with them, gathered new hope that a true democracy might be established in Germany and contributed considerably to the realization of this model during the first harsh postwar years. After a lapse of several decades, I can thus state with conviction that in spite of all the initial difficulties, the encounter proved rewarding to both sides”[2].

Until 1958, Löwenthal worked as a reporter for Reuters press agency and The Observer newspaper. In 1959 Löwenthal became a professor in political science at the Free University of Berlin. In 1974 Löwenthal became the Professor Emeritus at the Free University. Löwenthal ’s chief interests were Communism and Eastern Europe. In 1960, Löwenthal married the sociologist Charlotte Abrahamsohn. In work on the Soviet Union, Löwenthal ’s major interests were the emergence of what he considered to an element of pluralism into Soviet politics, especially during the rule of Nikita Khrushchev. One of Löwenthal ’s more notable ideas was that under the rule of Joseph Stalin, the Soviet Union had been a totalitarian state, but what emerged after Stalin’s death was a system Löwenthal called “Post-totalitarian” in which the Soviet state remained omnipotent in theory and highly authoritarian in practice, but did scale down considerably the scale of repression and allow much greater level of pluralism into public life.

Löwenthal was a strong advocate of closer European integration and of an Atlanticist orientation. In the late 1960s, Löwenthal was initially sympathetic towards student protestors, but turned against what he regarded as the destructive anarchism and “romantic relapse” into Marxism of theNew Left and rejected their call for a West German pull-out from NATO as opening the door for the Soviet conquest of Western Europe. An major intellectual in the SPD, Löwenthal was often consulted by the SPD’s leaders, especially Willy Brandt and Ernst Reuter.

[edit] Work

  • Co-written with Willy Brandt Ernst Reuter, ein Leben für die Frieheit; eine politische Biographie, München: Kindler, 1957.
  • World Communism : the Disintegration of a Secular Faith, New York : Oxford University Press, 1964.
  • (Editor) Issues in the Future of Asia : Communist and Non-Communist Alternatives, New York : Praeger, 1969.
  • Romantischer Rückfall, Stuttgart, W. Kohlhammer 1970.
  • Die zweite Republik; 25 Jahre Bundesrepublik Deutschland: eine Bilanz, Stuttgart, Seewald Verlag 1974.
  • Vom Kalten Krieg zur Ostpolitik, Stuttgart : Seewald, 1974 ISBN 3512003648.
  • Model or Ally? : The Communist Powers and the Developing Countries, New York : Oxford University Press, 1977 ISBN 0195021053.
  • (Editor) End and beginning : on the Generations of cultures and the Origins of the West by Franz Borkenau, New York : Columbia University Press, 1981, 0231050666.
  • Widerstand und Verweigerung in Deutschland 1933 bis 1945, Berlin : Dietz, 1984 ISBN 3801230082.
  • Social Change and Cultural Crisis, New York : Columbia University Press, 1984 ISBN 0231056443.

[edit] Endnotes

  1. ^ Second Chance: Two Centuries Of German-speaking Jews in the United Kingdom edited by Werner E. Mosse, Julius Carlebach, Gerhard Hirschfeld, Aubrey Newman, Arnold Paucker, Peter Pulzer , J.C.B. Mohr, London, 1991 page 134
  2. ^ Second Chance: Two Centuries Of German-speaking Jews in the United Kingdom edited by Werner E. Mosse, Julius Carlebach, Gerhard Hirschfeld, Aubrey Newman, Arnold Paucker, Peter Pulzer , J.C.B. Mohr, London, 1991 page 135.

[edit] References

  • (Editors) Hannelore Horn, Alexander Schwan & Thomas Weingartner Sozialismus in Theorie und Praxis : Festschrift für Richard Löwenthal zum 70. Geburtstag am 15. April 1978, Berlin ; New York : de Gruyter, 1978 ISBN 3110072211.
  • Second Chance: Two Centuries Of German-speaking Jews in the United Kingdom edited by Werner E. Mosse, Julius Carlebach, Gerhard Hirschfeld, Aubrey Newman, Arnold Paucker, Peter Pulzer , J.C.B. Mohr, London, 1991, ISBN 978-3161457418.
  • Laqueur, Walter The Fate of the Revolution : Interpretations of Soviet history from 1917 to the Present, New York : Scribner's, 1987 ISBN 0684189038.

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