PECHEL, RUDOLF
Publié le 22/02/2012
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PECHEL, RUDOLF (1882–1961), publicist; as editor of Deutsche Rundschau,
a strong neoconservative influence on Berlin's* intellectual life. Born in
the Mecklenburg village of Gu¨strow, he took a doctorate in German studies
before joining the staff of Weimar's Goethe- und Schiller-Archiv. After a subsequent
posting with the Ma¨rkisches Museum in Berlin, he began writing for
the biweekly Literarisches Echo in 1912. He met Julius Rodenberg, publisher
of Deutsche Rundschau, before the war; in April 1919 he became the journal's
editor. Among Germany's oldest publications, Deutsche Rundschau was already
a voice of German conservatism. But it was Pechel, remaining for almost
twenty-three years, who transformed it into Germany's most respected neoconservative
publication.
Resolved to exercise political influence, Pechel formed ties with several neoconservative
groups. A member of the Juni-Klub, a circle centered on Arthur
Moeller* van den Bruck, he retained close contact with its successor, the Herrenklub.*
Deutsche Rundschau promoted the antiparliamentary ideology of both
groups. As president of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft fu¨r die Interessen der Grenzund
Auslandsdeutschen (Alliance for the Interests of Border and Foreign Germans),
Pechel published the organization's nationalistic propaganda. In 1924 he
assumed sole direction of the Deutsche Rundschau. Procuring clandestine data
from industry and ministerial offices, he used the journal to influence government
policy, especially foreign affairs. From the mid-1920s Deutsche Rundschau
was a mouthpiece for the Munich Academy for Scientific Research and the
Fostering of Germandom (Deutschtum).
Suffering financially, Deutsche Rundschau was purchased in 1932 by the
Norddeutsche Buchdruckerei und Verlagsanstalt. The next year Pechel was
joined by two associate editors, Paul Fechter and Eugen Diesel, both close
friends. He initially welcomed Hitler* and was prepared to cooperate with the
NSDAP, but the June 1934 murder of Edgar Jung,* a friend, forced a reappraisal.
Through judicious articles on past tyrants, Pechel used Deutsche Rundschau
as a tool of disguised opposition. Linked with the resistance, he was
arrested in 1942 and spent the remainder of the war at Sachsenhausen.
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