What the Führer means for Germans today
Seventy years after Adolf Hitler’s death, how Germans see him is changing
IN GERMANY, as in the rest of Europe, copyright expires seven decades after the author’s year of death. That applies even when the author is Adolf Hitler and the work is “Mein Kampf”. Since 1945, the state of Bavaria has owned the book’s German-language rights and has refused to allow its republication. German libraries stock old copies, and they can be bought and sold. But from January 1st no permission will be needed to reprint it.
This article appeared in the Christmas Specials section of the print edition under the headline “What the Führer means for Germans today”
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