Neuer Weg (magazine)

Neuer Weg
CategoriesPolitical magazine
Frequency
  • Monthly
  • Weekly
  • Biweekly
PublisherDietz Verlag
Founded1946
Final issue1989
CountryGerman Democratic Republic
Based inEast Berlin
LanguageGerman

Neuer Weg (German: New Path) was the official media outlet of the East German ruling party, Socialist Unity Party (SED).[1] Its subtitle was organ des Zentralkomitees der SED fur Fragen des Parteilebens (German: Organ of the Central Committee of the SED for questions of party life).[2] The magazine was in circulation between 1946 and 1989.

History and profile[edit]

Neuer Weg was started in 1946.[1] Its publisher was Dietz Verlag based in East Berlin.[2] The magazine was first published monthly.[3] Then its frequency was switched to weekly,[4] but from 1953 it came out biweekly.[1] It featured theoretical articles written by the leading members of the SED, including Werner Lamberz.[1][5][6] The editorial board members of the magazine and also, of Einheit, another official journal, were closely oversaw by the wife of Walter Ulbricht, Lotte Kühn, during the former's term as first secretary of the SED.[7] Neuer Weg folded in 1989.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d John Brown Mason (June 1959). "Government, Administration, and Politics in East Germany: A Selected Bibliography". American Political Science Review. 53 (2): 518. doi:10.2307/1952161. JSTOR 1952161. S2CID 251095627.
  2. ^ a b "Lista dei periodici. N" (in Italian). Fondazione Gramsci Emilia-Romagna. Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  3. ^ a b Randall L. Bytwerk (1999). "The failure of the propaganda of the German democratic republic". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 85 (4): 409. doi:10.1080/00335639909384271.
  4. ^ Melvin Croan (May 1959). "Book review". The Journal of Politics. 21 (2): 335. doi:10.2307/2127176. JSTOR 2127176.
  5. ^ "Briefly Noted" (PDF). CIA. 16 January 1967. Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  6. ^ Peter Grieder (1999). The East German Leadership, 1946–73: Conflict and Crisis. Manchester; New York: Manchester University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-7190-5498-3.
  7. ^ C.M. (August 1962). "Ulbricht: Khrushchev's Man in Germany". Communist Affairs. 1 (2): 22. JSTOR 45367976.