Deutsche Mathematik is also the name of a movement closely associated with the journal whose aim was to promote "German mathematics" and eliminate "Jewish influence" in mathematics, similar to the Deutsche Physik movement. As well as articles on mathematics, the journal published propaganda articles giving the Nazi viewpoint on the relation between mathematics and race[5][6][7] (though these political articles mostly disappeared after the first two volumes). As a result of this many mathematics libraries outside Germany did not subscribe to it, so copies of the journal can be hard to find. This caused some problems in Teichmüller theory, as Oswald Teichmüller published several of his foundational papers in the journal.
^Issue list of volume 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 at commons
^Moritz Epple and Volker Remmert and Norbert Schappacher, ed. (2010). History of Mathematics in Germany, 1920—1960(PDF) (Report). Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach. pp. 109–140. In particular: Philipp Kranz, The journal "Deutsche Mathematik" (1936-1942/44), p. 132—134. "His [Bieberbach's] further aim was to integrate and legitimize mathematics in the Nazi ideology." (p.132) — "In the so called 'work' part, alongside articles about questions of education of mathematics on school and university many articles with political/ideological contents were placed." (p.133)
^Sicherheitsdienst des Reichsführers-SS (1939). 1st Quarterly Situation Report. Vol. 2. In der Mathematik beginnt man jedoch allmählich die artgebundene Schaffensweise des Mathematikers zu erkennen, wozu die mit Unterstützung der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft herausgegebene Zeitschrift 'Deutsche Mathematik' wesentlich beigetragen hat. [In mathematics, they begin to gradually recognize the species-bound method of working of the mathematician, for which the journal 'Deutsche Mathematik', published with support of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, has essentially contributed.] Cited from Lothar Mertens (2004). 'Nur politisch Würdige'. Die DFG-Forschungsförderung im Dritten Reich 1933–1937. Oldenbourg Akademieverlag. p. 86. ISBN978-3-05-003877-3.
The title page, the table of contents, and some article pages of the journal's volume 1, issue 2 (1936) are linked from the blog Mathematicians are human beings (scientopia.org, 19 Sep 2011).