Ersatz good
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An ersatz good (German: [ɛɐ̯ˈzats]) is a substitute good, especially one that is considered inferior to the good it replaces.[1] It has particular connotations of wartime usage.
Etymology
Ersatz is a German word literally meaning substitute or replacement.[2] Although it is used as an adjective in English, it is a noun in German. In German orthography noun phrases formed are usually represented as a single word, forming compound nouns such as Ersatzteile ("spare parts") or Ersatzspieler ("substitute player"). While ersatz in English generally means that the substitution is of unsatisfactory or inferior quality compared with the "real thing", in German, there is no such implication: e.g., Ersatzteile 'spare parts' is a technical expression without any implication about quality, whereas Kaffeeersatz 'coffee substitute' is not made from coffee beans, and is thus inferior.
Historical context
World War I
In the opening months of World War I, replacement troops for battle-depleted German infantry units were drawn from lesser-trained Ersatz Corps, which were less effective than the troops they replaced.
Another example of the word's usage in Germany exists in the German naval construction programs at the beginning of the 20th century. In this context, the phrasing "Ersatz (shipname)" indicates that a new, larger or more capable ship was a replacement for an ageing or lost vessel. Because German practice was not to reveal the name of a new ship until its launch, this meant that the ship was known by its "Ersatz (shipname)" throughout its construction. At the end of World War I, the last three ships of the planned Template:Sclass- of battlecruisers were redesigned and initially known simply as the Template:Sclass-, since the first ship was considered to be a replacement for the lost armored cruiser Yorck.
The Allied naval blockade of Germany throttled maritime commerce with Germany, forcing Germany and Austria-Hungary to develop substitutes for products such as chemical compounds and provisions. More than 11,000 ersatz products were sold in Germany during the war. Patents for ersatz products were granted for 6000 varieties of beer, wine and lemonade; 1000 kinds of soup cubes; 837 types of sausage and 511 assortments of coffee.[3]
Ersatz products developed in Germany and Austria-Hungary during this time included:[4]
- synthetic rubber Kautschuk produced from petroleum for rubber
- benzene for heating oil (coal gas)
- industrial lubricants made by extracting oils from coal tar and brown-coal slags
- synthetic camphor for imported natural camphor
- nitrate crepe paper made from cellulose for gun cotton
- glycerin from sugar rather than fats
- gypsum yielded sulphur
- pigeon guano used to make fertilizer
- flowers and weeds processed to make alcohol for ammunition
- rosins and gums extracted from coal derivatives
- tea composed of roasted barley, grasses, wild flowers, ground raspberry leaves or catnip
- coffee substitute using roasted acorns, chicory and beechnuts (stretched with caramel-flavoured raw sugar and beet flower later in the war)
- butter replaced by curdled milk, sugar and food colouring
- cooking oil replaced by a mixture of beets, carrots, turnips and spices
- salad oil was 99 per cent mucilage
- eggs replaced by yellow-coloured corn or potato flour
- ground European beetles (cockchafers) and linden wood replaced fats
- sausage made of water, plant fibres, animal scraps and blood - (the infamous 'war sausage' which was equated to 'a mouthful of sawdust')
- bouillon cubes made 70-90 per cent of salt rather than meat extract
- wheat flour stretched by adding potato flour and powdered hay
- chocolates and cocoa replaced by ground cocoa shells and mixed pure pepper*
- oil and sunflower 'cakes' replaced corn and oats as horse feed
- rapeseed, poppy and mustard 'cakes' replaced green feed for cattle
- paper, peat, reeds, bulrushes and free-growing stinging nettle fibres replaced cotton in textiles
- wood and paper used for shoe soles
Germany also stretched its supply of gasoline with 'gasohol' (Benzolspiritus), which consisted of 3 parts petrol to 1 part distilled alcohol.
World War II
In World War II, Ersatzbrot (substitute bread) made of potato starch, frequently stretched with extenders such as sawdust, was furnished to soldiers as Kommissbrot, a dark German bread baked from rye and other flours used for military rations,[5][6] and also to prisoners of war.[7][8][9] One recipe discovered in the Food Providing Ministry in Berlin, labeled "(Top Secret) Berlin 24.X1 1941," contained 50% bruised rye grain, 20% sliced sugar beets, 20% "tree flour" (sawdust), and 10% minced leaves and straw.[7]
During the Siege of Leningrad, its citizens were given ersatz flour instead of actual wheat flour (of which there was an extremely limited supply then) by the Soviet authorities. The lack of proper food with any nutrition meant that the city residents not only starved but became vulnerable to deadly illnesses and diseases (such as dysentery) owing to their weakened physical conditions.[10] As a result, the word ersatz entered as a pejorative into Russian and other Slavic languages.
In Britain, this was additionally popularised as an adjective from the experiences of thousands of U.S., British, and other English-speaking combat personnel, primarily airmen, who were captured in the European Theater of Operations during World War II. These Allied prisoners of war were given ersatz goods such as Ersatzkaffee, an inferior Getreidekaffee or "grain coffee" as a coffee substitute by their German captors.
Eastern Bloc
In the Eastern Bloc, many agricultural goods could not be produced domestically, such as tea, coffee, nuts, and citrus fruits. These were generally imported from abroad with scarce foreign currency reserves, or inferior substitutes were produced domestically. In 1977, the East German coffee crisis resulted in the introduction of many coffee substitutes, which were generally rejected by the population. Replacements for orangeat and succade were made from candied carrot and unripe tomatoes.[11]
Effectiveness
This paragraph may be too technical for most readers to understand.(November 2020) |
When people are asked to choose an ersatz good, they tend to prefer a substitute from the same category as the good they desire to a goal-derived substitute, one that meets the same goal. For instance, a person who desires a gourmet chocolate is more likely to choose another, less expensive chocolate as a substitute than a different kind of dessert or snack. Because such "within-category" substitutes are easier to compare to the desired good, however, those that are inferior are less effective than "cross-category" substitutes that fulfill the same goal. People are more able to notice their inferiority during consumption, which leads them to be less satisfying than goal-derived substitutes from different taxonomic categories.[12]
During the First World War in Germany and Austria-Hungary, people succumbed to sickness from the consumption of ersatz goods.
In Austria, the term 'Vienna sickness' was coined after malnutrition from was linked to a cause of the tuberculosis epidemic (10,000 reported cases)[13]
In Germany, Princess Blücher suffered from influenza in 1916, suggesting that she was suffering from "ersatz illness". She writes: "everyone is feeling ill from too many chemicals in the hotel food. I don't believe that Germany will ever be starved out, but she will be poisoned out first with these substitutes."[14]
See also
- Adulterant
- Austerity
- Backstop resources
- Claytons, a word used in Australian and New Zealand English
- Counterfeit
- Giffen Good, a good for which there is no ersatz replacement, causing demand to rise with prices
References
- ^ Mises, Ludwig von (1949). "War and Autarky". Human Action.
A substitute is a good which is either less suitable or more expensive or both less suitable and more expensive than the proper good which it is designed to replace.
- ^ "Ersatz - Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary". Merriam-webster.com. 2012-08-31. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
- ^ Luders, Marie-Elisabeth (1936). Das unbekannte Heer. Frauen kampfen fur Deutschland 1914-1918. Berlin: E.S. Mittler & Sohn. p. 122.
- ^ Herwig, Holger H (1997). The First World War Germany and Austria-Hungary 1914-1918. London: Arnold. pp. 256, 257, 275–6, 288–9. ISBN 0340677538.
- ^ Ganse, Alexander (15 February 2002). "War Economies". History of the Economy. World History at KMLA. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
- ^ "Medicine: Feeding the Reichswehr". Time Magazine. Time. 28 July 1941. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
- ^ a b Akita, Stanley. "Life at Stalag VII A". THE HAWAI'I NISEI STORY: Americans of Japanese Ancestry During WWII. University of Hawaii. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
- ^ Sumner, Judith (2019). Plants Go to War: A Botanical History of World War II. McFarland. p. 297. ISBN 1476676127. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
- ^ Ossad, Steve. "The Liberation of Nordhausen Concentration Camp". Warfare History Network. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
- ^ Simmons, Cynthia; Perlina, Nina (2005-01-19). Writing The Siege Of Leningrad: Women's Diaries, Memoirs, and Documentary Prose (Pitt Series in Russian and East European Studies) (1st ed.). University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 97. ISBN 0822958694.
- ^ "Geheimsache Süßtafel". Der Spiegel (in German). 22 April 1991. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
- ^ Huh, Young Eun; Vosgerau, Joachim; Morewedge, Carey K. (2016-06-01). "More Similar but Less Satisfying Comparing Preferences for and the Efficacy of Within- and Cross-Category Substitutes for Food". Psychological Science. 27 (6): 894–903. doi:10.1177/0956797616640705. ISSN 0956-7976. PMID 27142460.
- ^ May, Arthur J (1966). The Passing of the Hapsburg Monarchy 1914-1918. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 287–9.
- ^ Princess Blucher, Evelyn (1920). An English Wife in Berlin: A Private Memoir of Events, Politics, and Daily Life in Germany throughout the War and the Social Revolution of 1918. New York: E.P. Dutton. p. 122.