Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927)

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Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927)
Carnival in Berlin-1930
Jeanne Mammen (1890-1976)
German Painter and Illustrator
,Komm süßer Tod, tanz mir den Schmerz aus meiner Seele'
Angsty Ludwig lets go! Nothing is more fun than combining drugs, PTSD and an economic crisis into one big meltdown(yay)
Inspirited by this post
Moreover, Germans engaged in “quality work” (Qualitätsarbeit), they asserted, which relied on highly skilled craftsmen and precision labor. Instead of adopting the assembly line, German businessmen, engineers, psychologists, and sociologists focused on time-motion studies and psychological techniques designed to enhance the productivity of labor. These new efforts to “engineer” the modern worker involved modern psychology and changes in the technology and organization of production that vastly diminished the autonomy of skilled workers on the shop floor. Workers were to be tested, observed, trained, and managed—incessantly. As a result, managers assumed more power and the pace of work intensified.
The rewards—as with Henry Ford’s high-wage–high-consumption model—were supposed to come in the form of economic prosperity for all, and it was on that basis, and because of their commitment to technology, that Social Democrats supported rationalization. But the social benefits were never to emerge, at least not at the level at which they would have a highly beneficial impact on the broad mass of workers. Certainly, major companies deployed an array of welfare programs designed to bind workers to the firm. But major benefits like company housing were generally limited to an elite stratum of the workforce. For the rest, it was sports teams, parks and playgrounds, churches, cultural events, newspapers, and recreational associations, all sponsored by the company and dedicated to creating a loyal workforce. The companies directed many of their efforts at women—not female workers, but the wives of male workers. The presumption was that as the caretakers of the “orderly family,” widely understood as the bedrock of society, women would benefit from advice on how to conduct household labor more productively, which would also signify efficient use of the wages brought home by the male worker. A cozy, comfortable, and rationalized household would give the men the rest and recuperation they needed to perform well day in and day out, by the drill press, the mine seam, or the blast furnace.
Rationalization, far from bringing prosperity to workers, only made their lives more difficult. While wages did rise between 1924 and 1929, so did unemployment, and employed workers found the intensified pace of work nerve-rattling and destructive of their health. Any worker who objected was quickly told that there were thousands of others outside, ready to take his place.
Eric D. Weitz, Weimar Germany: Promise and Tragedy
Reinhold Gräf's alter ego reveal.
1921 cover for the magazine Berliner Leben
sabahattin ali on love in "madonna in a fur coat", published in 1943 (!!!)
Viktor und Viktoria (1933)