In the end, Berlin’s famous sex clubs were probably not much raunchier than similar places in other cities around the world. What distinguished them from their counterparts in America and in other European cities was their openness, their brazenness. The accessibility of vice was perhaps the main reason behind Weimar Berlin’s reputation for singular decadence. Another reason was the desire on the part of visiting foreigners to see the city as super-naughty, since this made them feel more daring. At the same time, however, it also made them feel morally superior to the natives. As Stephen Spender observed, “One of the contributions of Germany to the rest of civilization ever since the time of Tacitus has been to make it feel virtuous in comparison with the Germans.”
Among the foreigners attracted to “Babylon on the Spree” in the early twenties was the American writer and publisher Robert McAlmon. As a bisexual and occasional drug-user, McAlmon was in his element. In an autobiographical piece called
McAlmon did not mean for this report to be inspirational; like many visitors, he eventually tired of Berlin’s strenuous sleaze and moved on. The sad reality, these foreigners soon saw, was that the German capital could be quite depressing and tawdry under its veneer of glitter. Of course, the foreigners had the luxury of abandoning Berlin when they had had enough of the place; the natives had to stay on and try to survive.
Living in Berlin during the inflation years meant putting up with increasing social disorder. Because farmers refused to sell their produce for depreciated marks, there was a growing shortage of food. Shops in the poorer quarters of town were frequently looted. Strikes in crucial sectors of the economy became endemic as even the better paid workers saw their purchasing power evaporate. In summer 1923 streetcar, elevated train, and gas works employees all walked off the job. In August 1923 workers at the Reich Printing Plant struck, shutting down the production of paper money just as the nation was due to get a much-needed fix of 50 million mark bills.
The strikers, for all their grievances, were better off than the growing legion of unemployed. In mid-September 1923 Berlin had 126,393 registered unemployed. On October 9 the figure had climbed to 159,526, and by late November it was over 360,000. The city was able to provide limited unemployment relief for only 145,000 people. The combination of escalating joblessness, astronomical prices, and the old human need to find a scapegoat for one’s misery was too combustible a mix not to blow up, and in early November 1923 the inevitable explosion occurred in the form of deadly rioting with ugly anti-Semitic undertones.