The new now : German modernists and news media, 1918-1951
Abstract
The thesis explores how German modernists understood the interrelation between news media
and the experience of present time. The German modernists whose formative cultural and
political experience was the Weimar Republic believed that the production and consumption of
news media had the potential to synchronize spatially distant events. The distinctly modern
sensation of contemporaneity was thought by Weimar modernists to depend on media
representations of simultaneous events. Furthermore, the thesis illustrates how the Weimar
modernist conception of present time and news media depended on a specific conception of
history. The phenomena of modern news-media synchronicity and world history were
frequently conflated by the modernists.
The thesis explores this novel understanding of present time as a series of chronotopes
that were prevalent in what I term the Weimar modernist news-media discourse. The
synchronous present of modern news media is traced through modernist descriptions of it. Mid-20th century journalists, cultural critics and academic philosophers shared an understanding of
present time and news media production. The selected method reveals a shared understanding
of present time and news media production among mid-20th-century German modernists. The
analysed authors include journalists, cultural critics and academic philosophers who partook in
the modernist discourse regarding news media. Finally, the study shows how these chronotopes
transformed in tandem with the history of the period between 1918 and 1951. It holds that
specific urban settings and their news markets influenced how the modernists understood news
media and present time. Through this historical investigation of Weimar modernism and its
relation to news media, I contribute to the intellectual history of the 20th-century and the
historical study of time. My historical analysis illustrates how journalistic theory, political
thought and philosophy were influenced by this understanding of news media and time between
1918 and 1951.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
Rights
Embargo Date: 2027-04-18
Embargo Reason: Thesis restricted in accordance with University regulations. Restricted until 18th April 2027
Collections
Items in the St Andrews Research Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.