Published September 29, 2025 | Version v2
Journal article Open

Rescuing the National Body? The Role and Imaginary of Maritime Lifesaving in the Nazi State

  • 1. ROR icon Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung

Description

The Deutsche Gesellschaft zur Rettung Schiffbrüchiger (DGzRS) is a German maritime rescue organization founded in 1865 and based on humanitarian principles to save shipwrecked persons regardless of nationality or other characteristics. Rather than stagnating or being disbanded during the Nazi period, the society expanded significantly, with a sharp increase in membership. It branded itself—visually and semantically—as a Nazi organization. Analysis of historical publications of the DGzRS and holdings in the German federal archives reveals how a humanitarian organization like the DGzRS could thrive under a fascist regime. This development was made possible because maritime lifesaving not only served a certain function for the Nazi state, which was amplified within the context of the Second World War, but also because idioms of rescue resonated with the social imaginaries of both humanitarianism and Nazism.

Files

Schemper - Rescuing the National Body? The Role and Imaginary of Maritime Lifesaving in the Nazi State - 2025.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

ISSN
1918-6576

Funding

European Commission
AISLES - Archipelagic Imperatives: Shipwreck and Lifesaving in European Societies since 1800 863393

Dates

Issued
2025-09-29