Auction 85 Part 1 Historical Militaria and Autographs - Day 1
Oct 28, 2020 (your local time)
USA
 98 Bohemia Ave., St. 2, Chesapeake City, MD 21915
Nearly 1,600 lots of historical militaria from all conflicts; historical autographs and ephemera from all fields of collecting.
The auction has ended

LOT 522:

JULIUS STREICHER'S ANTI-SEMITIC CHILDREN'S BOOK, 'DER GIFTPILZ'

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Sold for: $1,600
Start price:
$ 1,000
Estimated price:
$2,000 - $3,000
Auction house commission: 30% More details
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JULIUS STREICHER'S ANTI-SEMITIC CHILDREN'S BOOK, 'DER GIFTPILZ'
Very rare book: 'Der Giftpilz' ('The Poison Mushroom'), by Ernst Hiemer with illustrations by Philipp Rupprecht ('Fips'), published by notorious anti-Semitic publisher Julius Streicher, through his Verlag Der Sturmer, Nuremberg, 1938. 64pp. 4to., cloth and paper covers, with 17 color plates. The text and images are extremely offensive, including one beneath a sinister-looking figure passing out candy to children: 'The Experience of Hans and Else with a Strange Man: 'Here, kids, I have some candy for you. But you both have to come with me'...', and one beneath a young boy showing a lady a mushroom in the forest: 'The Poisonous Mushroom: 'Just as it is often hard to tell a toadstool from an edible mushroom, so too it is often very hard to recognize the Jew as a swindler and criminal'...'. Julius Streicher, the Nazi publisher of the anti-Semitic newspaper 'Der Sturmer', issued 'Der Giftpilz' to generate anti-Semitism among young children by wrapping hateful, corrosive lies about Jews in the form of a traditional children's storybook. Today, its naked propaganda is shockingly apparent, but at the time, it was just one step in the Nazis' feverish rush toward the complete destruction of all Jews. The book uses outright fabrications to create a portrait of Jews as ugly, depraved and dishonest outsiders who must be rooted out for the good of society. Streicher used many of the same simplistic and often contradictory premises for 'Der Giftpilz' that he used in his newspaper. Defying logic, the stories taught that Jews were cunning but also stupid; too lazy to work, yet fanatically dedicated to destroying the Aryan 'race'; that they were money-worshiping capitalists but also capitalist-bashing Bolsheviks. The illustrations portrayed non-Jews as fair-haired, attractive, ideal Aryans, and showed Jews as dark, sinister, ugly caricatures. Following war's end, American soldiers gathered all copies of these books they could find and destroyed them. This particular copy bears a few stamps within from the school library of a Protestant school in Dinkelsbuhl, 1938. Scattered foxing to title page, bottom edges of some pages lightly soiled from use, in overall very good condition.

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