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the two world wars, Germany was on the move. The slowdown of the Great
Depression notwithstanding, more and more Germans took vacations and
enjoyed weekend adventures, and when they traveled, they did so to
destinations farther and farther away from home. Along the way, they
filled up trains, hotels, and youth hostels. And it was very much
Germany that Germans wanted to explore, following as they did quite
explicit itineraries of the idealized nation. “Seeing Germany,” as
Kristin Semmens puts it, was a way of possessing and occupying Germany.
This was quite deliberately the case for the hundreds of thousands of
visitors who took special trains to Stahlhelm marches, Reichsbanner
demonstrations, and, later in the 1930s, the Nuremberg party rallies,
for which more than 700 special trains were pressed into service in
1938. “Seeing Germany” was also at the heart of the new tourist
practices the Nazis created: the camp experiences of the Hitler Youth
and the rural outposts of the Reich Labor Service. Patriotism required
an overnight stay.