Chess in the Third Reich
Taylor Kingston
Chess in the Third Reich
Taylor Kingston
The USSR is famous as the first totalitarian state to promote chess. Less well known is that Nazi Germany was the second. The Third Reich gave it a tremendous financial and propaganda boost in hopes of making Germany a dominant chess power. Yet this aspect of the Nazi era has received scant attention in later German literature, and even less in English. Chess in the Third Reich fills that gap. Using a multitude of German sources, Taylor Kingston has crafted a narrative showing how the Nazis completely remade German chess into a monolithic structure to showcase the supposed cultural and intellectual superiority of the Master Race. Many games by German masters are presented--Bogoljubow, Richter, Samisch, Rellstab, Kieninger, Junge, to name a few--and by others who came under Nazi rule: Alekhine, Keres, Eliskases et al. Important political figures are featured: Otto Zander, Erhardt Post, Hans Schemm, Josef Goebbels, and especially Hans Frank. Politics affecting chess are detailed, both external (e.g. the annexations of Austria and Czechoslovakia) and internal (rivalry between the Grossdeutscher Schachbund and Kraft durch Freude), as of course are the effects of the war and persecution of Jews. A must for anyone interested in chess history.
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