The
Golden Twenties, in
Berlin was a vibrant period in the
history of Berlin,
German history, and
European history in general. This "fertile culture" of Berlin extended onwards until
Adolf Hitler rose to power in early
1933 and stamped out any and all resistance to the
Nazi Party, which was never very popular with many
Berliners. Likewise, the
Nazis decried Berlin as a haven of vice. A sophisticated, innovative
culture developed centered around Berlin and included
architecture and
design (
Bauhaus, 1919-33),
literature (
Döblin, ''
Berlin Alexanderplatz'',
1929),
film (
Lang, ''
Metropolis'',
1927,
Dietrich, ''
Der blaue Engel'',
1930),
painting (
Grosz),
music (
Weill, ''
Threepenny Opera'',
1928),
criticism (Benjamin),
philosophy/
psychology (
Jung), and
fashion. This culture was generally considered as
decadent and socially disruptive by
rightists.
Germany's liberal
Weimar constitution (
1919) could not guarantee a stable
government in the face of
rightist violence (
Rathenau assassination,
1922) and
Communist refusal to cooperate with
Socialists. Tremendous printing of currency to pay
Reparations caused staggering
inflation that destroyed
middle-class savings, but economic expansion resumed after mid-decade, aided by
U.S. loans.
As stated, this modern Renaissance occurred throughout the
Weimar Republic where
art,
music,
film, and other art-forms flourished, but was firmly rooted in Berlin.
Berlin was the centerpiece of
European culture from about 1923-1932. It caught on fully once the
hyper-inflation and other economic problems of the very early
1920s were brought under control by the newly elected government.
Film especially was making huge technical and artistic strides during this period of time in Berlin, and gave rise to the influential movement called
German Expressionism. "
Talkies" were also becoming more popular with the general public across Europe but especially in 1920s Berlin. (see the article on
UFA) ''See also:
List of films featuring Berlin''
Radical ideas on both the
right and
left floated through the wild and exciting streets of Berlin throughout the post-
World War I years, with open-clashes between the
left-wing Communists and
right-wing Fascists not at all uncommon.
The
heyday of Berlin began in the mid-1920s. It became the largest industrial city of
the continent. People like the
architect Walter Gropius,
physicist Albert Einstein,
painter George Grosz and
writers
Arnold Zweig,
Bertolt Brecht, and
Kurt Tucholsky made Berlin the cultural and
intellectual center of
Europe.
Night life was blooming in 1920s Berlin.
Tempelhof Airport was opened in 1923 and a start was made on
S-Bahn electrification from
1924 onwards. Berlin was also the second biggest
inland harbor of
the country; all of this
infrastructure was needed to transport and feed the over 4 million Berliners throughout the exciting yet hectic 1920s.
The
Humboldt University of Berlin (formerly ''
The University of Berlin'') became a major intellectual center in Germany, Europe, and the World. The
sciences were especially favored -- from
1914 to
1933,
Albert Einstein served as director of the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics in Berlin, only leaving after the
anti-Semitic Nazi Party rose to power.
The so-called "mystical arts" also experienced a revival during this time-period in Berlin, with
astrology, the
occult, and
esoteric religions and off-beat religious practices becoming more mainstream and acceptable to
the masses, who were now more open-minded to spiritual alternatives after witnessing the horrors and traumas of
World War I.
See also
★
Alexanderplatz
★
Bertolt Brecht
★
Cabaret (film)
★
Cinema of Germany
★
Erik Jan Hanussen
★
Friedrichstraße
★
German Expressionism
★
Glitter and Doom - German Portraits from the 1920s
★
History of Berlin
★
History of Germany
★
Intellectual center
★
Kreuzberg
★
List of films featuring Berlin
★ ''
Metropolis'' (film)
★
Nightlife
★
Potsdamer Platz
★
UFA
★
Weimar Culture