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Minister of Culture Johannes R. Becher (left) Greets Thomas Mann (right) at the Weimar National Theater (May 14, 1955)

In order to create cultural legitimacy for SED rule, the holders of power in the Soviet occupation zone borrowed ideas from Marxist literary theorist George Lukacs, who interpreted Goethe as the “champion of the advancement of humanity” and called upon Communists to embrace the cultural legacy of Classicism. Furthermore, Lukacs described Thomas Mann – the most important German author at the time – as Goethe’s successor. On the occasion of the 200th anniversary of Goethe’s birth, Thomas Mann was invited to Weimar in East Germany and Frankfurt am Main in the West. The author, who had not abandoned the idea of a unified German cultural community, traveled to both cities – and was sharply criticized for his trip in the West. In fact, his visit to East Germany was of great propagandistic value to the Communists since in their view (following Lukacs’s interpretation) Mann represented the link between Weimar Classicism and the Communist regime in the Soviet occupation zone. Although Mann turned down the National Prize and other awards from the SED, he did accept an invitation to go to Stuttgart and Weimar to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Schiller’s death. Even during the Cold War, he did not warm up to claims by either side that they were the exclusive representatives of German culture. Photo by Gerhard Kiesling.

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Minister of Culture Johannes R. Becher (left) Greets Thomas Mann (right) at the Weimar National Theater (May 14, 1955)

© Bildarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz / Gerhard Kiesling