Abstract

After the Revolution of 1848/49, book production in Germany dropped sharply. The emigration or incarceration of many revolutionary publishers contributed to this decline, as did the vigilance of German censors. For many years, newspapers were more important than books for the politically educated public. As this graph shows, it was only in 1879 that book production once again reached its 1843 level (approximately 14,000 new books per year). Between 1880 and 1913, book production roughly doubled. In the 1850s, theological books predominated. These works lost some of their importance in the 1870s, as pedagogical literature came to the fore. Fiction represented about 8–10% of book production. Among non-fiction works, encyclopedias grew in popularity. Throughout this period, Germany’s publishing industry was centered in the Saxon city of Leipzig, although Berlin grew in reputation and influence after 1871. The number of German bookshops also rose rapidly in these years, especially in larger Protestant cities. Still, books remained beyond the financial reach of a large majority of Germans, who thus borrowed their reading materials from lending libraries.

German-Language Book Production in Central Europe (1840–90)

Source

German Book Production, 1840–1890

Obviously, the book trade experienced a serious slump in sales between 1848 and 1880: Only in 1879 did the level of new publications match and surpass the level already attained back in 1843. Even in the years immediately preceding the revolution, the decline in production numbers seems to have laid the groundwork for what the events of 1848/49 meant for reading behavior.

[]

While the economy in the reactionary period experienced a first “founder’s high,” the book trade was only able to recover very slowly: Over the entire decade that followed, production hardly increased at all. Authors’ royalties and print runs, especially of fiction, were accordingly low. The more rapid expansion of the market during the New Era in Prussia was first halted only by the Austro-Prussian War, which once again proved the susceptibility of book production to crisis, “hurling back the excellent organization of our profession, laboriously developed over decades, to the primitive state of affairs of the previous century.” As early as the following “year of the classics”—1867—the rise began again, however, and even the war of 1870/71 appears to have impeded it only slightly.

According to the number of published titles, fiction took fourth place among the individual branches for the entire period, amounting to 8–10 percent of the entire book market: In the 1850s, the dominance of theological and devotional literature still remained uncontested—works in this branch accounted for almost one-sixth of all published titles.

[]

Between 1865 and 1880 alone, the number of actual book publishers increased from 668 to 1,238. In 1869, there were 99 retail booksellers in Berlin, 88 in Leipzig, 36 in Hamburg, 35 in Vienna, 26 in Breslau, 24 each in Dresden and Prague, 22 in Frankfurt am Main, 20 in Munich, and 19 in Stuttgart. That year, there were 1,515 German retail booksellers overall: of them, 826 (54.5%) were in Prussia, 207 (13.6%) in the Kingdom of Saxony, and 152 (10%) in the Kingdom of Bavaria.

Year

Total

Fiction

Popular writings

1840

10,808

1841

11,080

993

1842

12,509

1843

14,039

1844

13,119

1845

13,008

1846

10,536

1847

10,684

1848

9,942

1849

8,197

1850

9,053

1851

8,326

829

167

1852

8,857

844

175

1853

8,750

908

171

1854

8,705

848

158

1855

8,794

887

168

1856

8,540

945

134

1857

8,699

950

135

1858

8,672

888

135

1859

8,666

913

209

1860

9,496

1861

9,566

1862

9,779

1863

9,889

1864

9,564

971

196

1865

9,661

935

212

1866

8,669

704

165

1867

9,855

852

212

1868

10,563

958

237

1869

11,305

999

335

1870

10,108

739

271

1871

10,669

950

236

1872

11,127

998

209

1873

11,315

948

205

1874

12,070

912

388

1875

12,516

1,061

471

1876

13,356

1,070

547

1877

13,925

1,126

540

1878

13,912

1,181

715

1879

14,179

1,170

642

1880

14,941

1,209

657

1881

15,191

1,226

639

1882

14,794

1,260

654

1883

14,802

1,207

724

By comparison, Federal Republic of Germany, including West Berlin:

Year

Total

Fiction

Popular writings

1971

42,957

8,165

Note: Data from 1860–1863 was not available. These figures also include German-language book production in Austria-Hungary and Switzerland, insofar as these titles were distributed in the German Empire (by way of Leipzig) after 1871.

Source: “Systematische Übersicht der literarischen Erzeugnisse des deutschen Buchhandels,” published annually in the financial newspaper for the German book trade by J. C. Hinrichs’schen Bookstore; German data reprinted in Max Bucher, Werner Hal, Georg Jäger, and Reinhard Wittmann, eds. Realismus und Gründerzeit: Manifeste und Dokumente zur deutschen Literatur 1848–1880, 2 vols. Stuttgart: J. B. Metzlersche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1975, vol. 1, pp. 166–69.

Translation: Erwin Fink