Dieter Kunzelmann
Dieter Kunzelmann was a German left-wing activist.
Gruppe SPUR
In the early 1960s Kunzelmann was a member of the Situationist International-inspired artists' group Gruppe SPUR. Kunzelmann was recognized as the "chief theorist" of Gruppe SPUR, which was a artists' collective emerging out of Schwabing, a city borough in Munich famed for its creative scene. Gruppe SPUR understood itself as an assault against industrialized art and the political consensus of art commerce. In January 1959 Gruppe SPUR staged the "Bense-Happening", inviting an audience to listen to incomprehensible lectures by Max Bense on tape. Bense was astonished, when asked about the matter by journalists.Socialist Students Union (SDS)
Rudi Dutschke confronted the Subversive Action, abbreviated by the group itself as SA, as repulsive youth rebellion. Kunzelmann alongside Frank Böckelmann and Rodolphe Gasche had founded the Subversive Action in 1963. The Subversive Action was active in Munich, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, and West Berlin. Dutschke fought a bitter battle against the Subversive Action. Eventually Dutschke joined the Socialist Students Union (SDS) and the Subversive Action was welcomed into the SDS because the SDS lacked experience in civil disobedience and public disruption.In September 1964 Kunzelmann and Dutschke agreed a program of action to abolish "the regime of the achievement principle which is particularly manifest in the contaminated psyche of people living in a consumer society". This program of action was proposed to the SDS and Kunzelmann launched a subversive action campaign. Kunzelmann's agitators mounted a huge Mercedes star on an altar and a flyer was distributed claiming that "the Good Lord of the old days... has to arrange himself with the fetishes and become a sublime fetish of performance ". In December 1964, Subversive Action engaged customers in Munich shopping malls in provocative discussions and leaflets were distributed. In April 1965 a lengthy catalogue of questions was published on consumer society, claiming that consumption "is the primary influence on life".
Kunzelmann was expelled from the Subversive Action for "unsolidary and contemptible behavior" in April 1965. Kunzelmann went on to establish "Go-Ins" in Berlin, were activists engaged in walking demonstrations on crowded shopping streets, distributing anti-Vietnam War leaflets in gift wrapped boxes. Officially, these "Go-Ins" were a reaction to student demonstrations being banned from the city center. Shopping malls became the focus of political agitation, after Dutschke published a text on revolution in Latin America, advocating for the establishment of a countermilieu.