Atze (German: Pal) was a monthly comics magazine which was published from 1955 to 1991 in East Germany. It was the first comic publication in the country and was one of the state-controlled publications targeting youth.[1]
History and profile
Atze was established in 1955 as a sister publication of another magazine named Der Junge Pionier (German: The Young Scout), and its first issue appeared in April that year.[2][3] Both magazines were edited by the same editorial team led by Klaus Hilbig for one year.[2][4] Then Atze became part of the Freie Deutsche Jugend (German: Central Council of the Free German Youth) which was a youth movement controlled by the state until 1990.[2] The publisher of the magazine was the Junge-Welt-Verlag, publishing company of the Freie Deutsche Jugend.[2][4]Atze came out monthly and was first headquartered in Berlin and then in Dresden.[4]
In the first year Atze was an eight-page publication.[5] The magazine was redesigned in 1957, and its page number was extended to twelve.[5] From 1962 its page number was sixteen.[5]
Atze began to feature the comic series Fix and Fax by Jürgen Kieser in 1958.[5][6] It also featured Pats Reiseabenteuer (German: Pat's Travel Adventures) which was started in 1967.[4][3] One of its editors-in-chief was Wolfgang Altenburger who held the post from 1963 who had been a contributor of Atze.[2] He introduced a new outline for the magazine.[5] It included political editorials and comic series Pats Reiseabenteuer and Fix and Fax.[5] This outline was employed without any significant change until the closure of Atze in 1991 due to its lower market share.[5]
Wolfgang Altenburger did not only introduce an outline for Atze, but also made the magazine much more political in 1967 through anti-western, nationalist and socialist content in order to encourage socialist ideology among East German youth.[3][7]
During its lifetime Atze produced a total of 442 issues and featured 1,686 comic stories.[8] The magazine had a constant circulation of 450,000 copies.[2]
References
^John D. Benjamin (2019). "Relocating the Text: Mosaik and the Invention of a German East German Comics Tradition". The German Quarterly. 92 (2): 149. doi:10.1111/gequ.12100.
^ abcSean Eedy (2018). "Four colour anti-fascism: postwar narratives and the obfuscation of the Holocaust in East German comics". Journal of Modern Jewish Studies. 17 (1): 25–26. doi:10.1080/14725886.2017.1382071. S2CID148646502.
^ abcd"Atze". ddr-werbefiguren-welt.de (in German). Retrieved 3 August 2023.
^ abcdefg"Atze". ddr-comics.de (in German). Retrieved 3 August 2023.
^Sean Eedy (2014). "Reimagining GDR comics: Kultur, children's literature and the socialist personality". Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics. 5 (3): 246. doi:10.1080/21504857.2014.908402. S2CID154817600.
^"Atze-Datenbank". weisshahn.de (in German). Retrieved 3 August 2023.