March 10, 2007

Linking the Holocaust to Adolf Hitler’s sexual problems—ranging from incest to deformed genitalia—seems to be a favorite parlor game for historians and psychologists and is now the subject of Norman Mailer’s controversial new novel, The Castle in the Forest. But, as Ron Rosenbaum, author of Explaining Hitler (which is one of the books that inspired Mailer to write his latest book), argues, blaming Hitler’s violent hatred towards Jews on theories of sexual perversion may be nothing more than Freudian psychoanalysis based on scant evidence and post-war rumor. In particular, he examines the “evidence” surrounding Hitler’s supposed incestuous relationship with his niece, Angela “Geli” Raubal (who may or may not have committed suicide on the eve of Hitler’s entry into German politics), and hopes that Mailer won’t take the “easy” way out by pinning all of Hitler’s hatred on sexual theories.

What does it all matter in the scheme of things? The trouble with the sexual explanation of Hitler, with almost all sexual explanations, is that they are reductionist: They leave out the political dimension, the cultural and ideological dimension of causation. They leave out nineteen centuries of European religious anti-Semitism that laid the groundwork for Hitler; they leave out the proliferation of ninteenth-century German “racial science” that propagated the notion, indeed virtually invented the notion—of “racial,” biological, anti-Semitism—of Judaism as a genetic disease that couldn’t be cured by mere conversion as in the past. Because it was “in the blood,” it could be cured only by extermination.

Entry Filed under: Books. .

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. lois  |  March 12, 2007 at 5:21 pm

    thats fucking interesting man. i do know that your mother has to be jewish for you to technically to be a jew, which is part of their theology. so its interesting that hitler used that against them. horrible and cruel, but simplistic genius.

    Reply
  • 2. Brandon  |  March 12, 2007 at 5:46 pm

    Lois: Hitler was indeed a very complicated man, but I think there were so many other factors that led to his rise to power. Germany was disillusioned and angry at the end of World War I, especially since the country essentially went from being an imperial superpower to an embarrassed and economically-depressed nation. But Hitler was also a master propagandist (as “Mein Kampf” shows); everything just kind of fell into place for him. Personally, I think his rhetoric is unconvincing and would be laughable if things hadn’t turned out the way they did, but when you consider the psychological factors of the Germans after World War I, it seems almost inevitable that they would follow him. He told them what they wanted to hear, he gave them a scapegoat, and he offered a solution for them to regain their pride. And the strangest part? Hitler’s propaganda techniques are still in practice today, although it’s largely relegated to marketing–take those commercials for “magic weight-loss pills,” for example–or for advancing a certain point of view, such as the assertion that rising greenhouse gases are slowly destroying the planet and that there’s nothing we can do about it.

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