Erich Wiedemann

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Erich Wiedemann (born 1942) is a German journalist and editor (at the Hamburg desk) for the weekly news magazine Der Spiegel,[1] where he began as a reporter in 1988.[2] For the FDP, he was also a member of the city council of Jesteburg and a representative for the Harburg district.[1]

Wiedemann has written on German minorities in other European countries[3] and on socio-economic developments in post-World War II Germany.[4] A Spiegel article on the Netherlands from 1994, in which Wiedemann argued that the country had lost its reputation for tolerance and suffered an identity crisis, caused a stir among the Dutch: Wiedemann reiterated a number of cliches about the Dutch, leading to a backlash from Dutch newspaper writers and critics.[5][6][7] The accompanying image by Sebastian Krüger depicted Frau Antje, a Dutch character used to promote cheese and other export articles, with a joint in her mouth, heroin syringes in her arm, and a case of Heineken, in a landscape of dirty tulips and polluting smokestacks.[8]

His articles have also appeared in translation in

Salon, through an arrangement with Der Spiegel.[9]

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