Sunday, June 2, 2019
Discovering the Third Reich Through Mephisto :: Essays Papers
Discovering the Third Reich Through MephistoMike, a confused coworker asked me, why do you want to take a course on the Nazis? Finding myself spur-of-the-moment to account for a lure that, to me, was intrinsic to the subject matter, I struggled with a hasty explanation about studying mass dementia for the sake of apprehension how it works and preventing it from happening again. A whole bunch of Jews went willingly to their deaths, I elaborated. A nation of people stood by and watched it happen. You have to wonder, why didnt somebody bar that? Yeah, replied my friend, the Germans said Come here and well kill you, and the Jews went anyway. I guess they were all stupid.I discovered that I had no immediate answer to this facetious dismissal of wizard of historys most profound tragedies. It was a sweeping and indiscriminate assertion, to be sure, but not one entirely without merit. If general stupidity were not to blame, then why had six million Jews endured such torture? Were none of them in a position to unite in any sort of cohesive resistance? What of the Catholics who were slay in the concentration camps as well? The blacks? Political dissidents? Members of the press? In fact it seems that the Nazis, over the course of their reign, discriminated against so many professions, creeds, philosophies, and classes that for a person not to belong to at least one must have been a remarkable feat of chance. I could not begin to understand how the National lovingist Party had, with such a miserable and offensive political platform, managed to gain power in Germany, nor how, with such cruel and oppressive practices, they managed to keep it.Klaus Manns Mephisto answered a tally of these questions for me. Though it did not trace the Nazis rise to power outside of mentioning a few highlights, it did portray in a frighteningly matter-of-fact manner the social and cultural climate of that crucial time period the dying years of the Weimar Republic, and the early years of the Third Reich. Specifically, it reassured me that the whole of Germany had not welcomed the Nazi coup with open arms, nor enjoyed the years spent living under the Reich.Was it possible? Manns character Hendrik wondered upon receiving the news of Hitlers appointment as chancellor. (Mephisto, 156) The blustering lout whom his brilliant and progressive friends had so often ridiculed had now suddenly become the most powerful man in the country This is horrible, thought the actor Hendrik Hfgen.
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