For The Rise Of National Socialism? Essay, Research Paper
As a
historian, I appreciate the absurdity of the rise of Nazism, however I have
found Meinecke?s explanation of the rise of Nazism, given its date of
publication, to be not so much a disclaimer on behalf of the German people, as
others have found it to be, but almost an attempt at academic vindication of
the Anglo-American post-war view of Germany, often supported by uncheckable
sources. ??????????? Before
assessing the book?s contents, it is important to note certain noteworthy
events surrounding the book?s publication that require attention.? Meinecke?s book was produced in 1946 and
published with the aid of Edward Y. Hartshore, an American working in the
reconstruction of the German university system.? Given the nature of the time, and the means by which Meinecke
found a publisher, one would expect a stance on Nazism that would be helpful to
the American occupation.? What appear to
be numerous anglicisms do appear throughout the volume, possibly suggesting
that Meinecke had been priming himself on English texts (the use of the present
participle in ?grundstuerzende Revolution? is not a common German
usage?).? Meinecke, soon to accept the
rectorship of the Free University of Berlin, an institute founded with the
blessing of General Clay himself, would certainly have quite an incentive for
inobjectivity as the foremost western scholar on the Cold War?s front line. ??????????? The
introduction to the book also provides an important insight into Meinecke?s
life during the period.? Meinecke says
that he was ?durch ein Augenleiden behindert? and had to rely ?fast
auf mein Gedaechtnis.?? He notes
that the book should not only be read as the product of a handicapped author
but as just one part of the picture, and that the book was not only answering
the questions it posed itself, but also acting as a medium for recording
phrases, quotes and sayings of prominent persons of the era which might
otherwise be lost.? The desire to use
certain of these sources might have also shaped his argument to some
extent.? Meinecke ends his introduction
with a wish that his book might help the rebuilding process and that the new
Germany could be ?spiritually purer.??
This moralising is just one of a series of reasons to be sceptical about
the book?s contents, as it suggests that Meinecke is attempting to tell the
Nazi story as a ?cautionary tale? and not as a pure history.Meinecke
starts by identifying the two great movements of the nineteenth century
asnationalism (which became imperialism) and socialism.? Nationalism was the product of an end to the
way of life ?aimed solely at the advancement and enrichment of one?s own
individuality? and was bourgeois in nature. The nationalist movements were born
of the liberal movements that succeeded in securing the liberties of so many
nations by the means of constitutions or democracies.? Meinecke notes that during the Revolution of 1848, the needs of
the revolting faction were not so much liberty, as power, as their liberties
had apparently already been secured. Meanwhile, the
masses created by industrialisation pushed for socialism so as to ?safeguard
fully their standard of living.? Meinecke sees ?the two great waves of the
nineteenth century? [as having] a wholly peculiar character in Germany? where
they developed ?fighting qualities which, when at the historic moment arrived
for their intermingling were to be fatal.??
??????????? Meinecke
sees the vying between these powers as the first phases in the degeneration of
the German middle classes.? The
hardening of nationalism that lead to the preponderance of such groups as the
Pan-Germans, and a widened divide between the socialists and nationalists
(which, in turn led to Naumann?s national socialist movement).? The combat of the ideologies, as it later
would in Weimar, led to a spiritual and cultural renaissance, second only to
the Goethezeit.? At the same
time, however, amoral nihilist nationalism which viewed a nation as not only
superior, but in demand of superior scales of morality and humanity would set
the stage for the hypocrisy of the Nazi state. ??????????? This
analysis would seem to be an over-complication of the emergence of the
Pan-German movements.? In an era when
ethnic groups were still classed as different species, and when it was believed
races carried moral and cognitive characteristics, it is unsurprising that a
number of pseudo-scientific eugenic theories about who the greatest and
aboriginal race were (the Aryans) were produced.? Given the number of German cultural icons in the era, the
emergence of the German economic and military power,? Germany?s cultural force it is not surprising that many papers
concluding a German superiority were produced with ?scientific? backing. ??????????? The
nineteenth century Germans can be forgiven for making rash assumptions about
the nature race in an age of ignorance in an attempt at scientific
endeavour.? Meinecke, however, feels the
need to exonerate the German people of the Holocaust, which he does by
attributing German anti-Semitism not to Nazism but to a ?general trend.?? This dehumanisation of German society is a
theme of Meinecke?s book, as he notes that causality is more complicated than
simple events leading to one another, and that a sweep of events can be as important
as an individual person or action.? This
view of the movement of history with semi-static figures diverting its flow
diminishes personal responsibility and was probably a tactful way of
documenting the rise of Nazism in Germany immediately after the war, although
it lacks precision and the scientific cut that most historians pride themselves
on.??????????? According
to Meinecke?s account, at the outbreak of the First World War, the fragmented
German people were united behind the Kaiserreich and social, economic
and political divides were momentarily dissolved in a flurry of Germanist
hope.?? However, Meinecke writes, ?as
early as 1915, one could perceive that the August synthesis would not
last.?? The demands of the worker for
?full equality of legal rights now that he had shown in the fight for the
Fatherland that his contribution was as valuable as that of any other citizen?
were at odds with the burgerliche Mittelstand, and soon the country?s
fragile social truce fell apart.? In the
autumn of 1917, the democratic parties formed the ?People?s League? whilst the
?Fatherland Party? was formed to oppose their progressive stance, and were able
to more forcefully act upon the weak Imperial government.? The influence of the Pan-Germans over the
Fatherland Party was almost absolute, and their refusal to bow down to
?inferior? peoples apparently prevented a peace accord being reached
earlier.? Meinecke asks the reader ?can
one doubt any longer that the Pan-Germans and the Fatherland party are an exact
prelude to Hitler?s rise to power?? ??????????? That
the German people were swept along by euphoria is beyond doubt.? The famous pictures of the crowds, including
Hitler, at the Odeonsplatz and Marienplatz in Munich are celebrated icons of
war, and the rejoicing Bavarians were the most unPrussian element in German
society. However, that the country was united and behind the war effort is
dubious.? The precepts of socialism did
not change.? The socialist groupings
were as anti-imperialist as they had been before.? Although they would not condemn a war with such popular support,
especially one marketed as being in ?self-defence? by the Imperial Government,
they would have been tactful in their disdain for the war.? The influence of the Pan-Germans was more
evident in the Ludendorff?s role.?
Ludendorff, the most celebrated of the Beerhall Putschers, was one of
the two generals who, by 1918 had control over the civil authorities and were
essentially running a Prussian Army autocracy across Germany.? The role of the Kaiser, and thus, the Fatherland
Party, had been minimalised by the two Field Marshals who held the balance of
power.? The Fatherland Party was, at
best, a sideline interest group.? Their
failure to attract sufficient support to survive in the Weimar Republic is
perhaps indicative of their interest. Meinecke
perceives the next phase in the rise of Nazism as the Dolchstosslegende.? The growth of the belief in the military
failure?s causation by revolution on the home front was widespread on the
right.? The blaming of the People?s
League, who went on to form the parties of the Weimar Republic, for the defeat,
which descended to the murder of Rathenau in 1922 as payment for his signature
on the Treaty of Versailles, would mean that the conservative upper middle
class and the aristocracy were sworn to destroy the Republic by whatever means
were necessary.? Meinecke notes that a
friend, Siegfried v. Kardoff, once said that ?the Weimar Constitution was
destroyed over the card table.?? He
notes that the Jewish community was ?too greedy? in their lifestyles and that
the inevitable jealousy, spurred by the Pan-Germans, led to a strong
anti-Semitic tendency. The post-war
world?s first revolution occurred in 1922, when Mussolini ?marched on Rome? and
seized power, and Meinecke says that it was in a way that the German people
wished to emulate. Wishing to mobilise the little Reichswehr and the Freikorps
against the Republic, the conservative right knew that, excluding the
commander in chief himself, General v. Seeckt, the Reichswehr was still a
Wilhelmine construction with Wilhelmine leanings and was still dominated by
Prussian militarism.My greatest
difficulty with any single aspect of Meinecke?s explanation comes in the
chapter ?Homo Sapiens and Homo Faber.??
His explanation of the degeneration of the Weimar Germans into Nazi
Germans is explained away in a series of occasionally unsupported and deeply
subjective generalisations.? The
relationship between the rational and the irrational seems to be an
over-complication of the concept of emotive motivation as opposed to
logical-rational motivation, of which people, individually and as a society,
need a healthy balance. The next
section of the chapter, however seems to be unsupported conjecture at
best.? Quoting a mysterious ?observer,?
Meinecke claims that an intense aclassical education can lead to radicalism
later in life when the person matures into political awareness, due to a lack
of understanding. This means that the burgeoning class of engineers and
technicians created by the industrialisation process was a potential time-bomb.? Evidently using ?Mein Kampf? as his source
about Hitler?s time in Vienna, Meinecke, who admittedly lacked the resources of
the late twentieth century about the era, used Hitler as an example of someone
lacking classical education who had worked in an intensive manner.? Hitler had, at the least, initially a
classical education and the fact that he never worked on a construction site,
let alone made political theories based on his experiences in one. The (Marxist?)
idea that mankind?s fundamental state has only ever been changed by
industrialisation is expressed in a new way in Meinecke?s text.? He claims that technology had catalysed the
formation of this explosive new class.?
The idea that industrial Germany had a new class of disciplined and
eager people whose concentration had been honed by mundane and repetitive jobs,
and yet whose cognitive ability could easily be sparked and harnessed by
?fashionable? ideas seems a little too far a generalisation.The next phase
in Meinecke?s assessment of the rise of the Nazis comes again to the Prussian
militarism.? He paraphrases Voltaire?s
maxim that ?most states keep an army yet in Prussia, the army keeps a
state.?? Prussia?s army had gone from a
?Grande Armee? style state-dominating force under Friedrich Wilhelm I, to a
militia supplemented elite, then back to an elite medium that had dominated
continental politics for 40 years upto the First World War.? The ever-adapting Prussian army held only a
few principles dear.? The Teutonic
subservience to one?s lord and the willingness to sacrifice one?s life for
another?s goal made the Prussian mindset, whatever form the Prussians assumed
on the field.? This narrow-mindedness
was blamed for the failure of the Schlieffen Plan.? Claiming that a homo faber obsessed with railway tracks
and guns and overlooked the political consequences of the invasion of Belgium
drew up the plan, Meinecke stretches the distinction between the ?professional
man? and the ?renaissance man? even further. This
rationality and unemotiveness of this mindset saw Hitler as a potential channel
not only for reversal of the Dolchstosslegende but also as a source of
energy and power for a German risorgimento.?
The prosecution of young officers at Ulm is proof of the susceptibility
of this social class to Hitlerian propaganda. Although the
inclusion of the homo faber principle is still contentious for me, the
idea of Hitler appealing to the German army is quite plausible, and one I would
support.? I do not agree that the army
was important as it held the balance of power in the Republic. As Meinecke
says, the President absorbed as much from the army as the army took from him,
and a lack of army support was one of the issues that unseated Bruening. Meinecke goes
on to briefly map the power of the appeal of Nazism to the German youth and war
veterans.? Again, the Dolchstosslegende
but also the promise of ?Arbeit und Brot? attracted the youth.? Allegedly, Hitler came to power through a
?dazzled? youth movement which built the SA and SS into a powerful force to
rival the Reichswehr.? On the collapse
of the Grand Coalition, and of the Bruning Coalition, Hindenburg hearkened to
the calls of the Army, and sent for the man he had once described as a
?Jumped-up Bohemian Corporal? to become Chancellor.? I believe that the power of the SA and SS was overemphasised in
Meinecke?s account and that Hitler did not come to power ?through? the SA and
SS, but, by 1933, in spite of it. Meinecke goes
on to state that he and colleagues (including Groener) were discussing the
?flood? of Nazism, and its rise.? The
claims that Groener would not be able to stop it are of interest.? Although the near-blind professor admitted
that he was unable to read his notes, this seems a highly unlikely thing for
Groener to say.? In the words of Karl
Dietrich Bracher, ?the history of National Socialism was the history of its
fatal underestimation.?? Had anyone in
the Cabinet of Barons or the Grand Coalition suspected that the Nazis were a
dominant and growing force, then it seems unlikely that von Papen would have
claimed that he would appoint Hitler and ?push him so hard into a corner that
he?ll squeak.?? That Kurt von Schleicher
wished to crush Nazism is also highly unlikely.? The man who attempted to use the Strasser bloc of the party as a
separate bloc would surely not have tried to destroy it. Meinecke
continues his summary of the rise of Nazism by questioning the role of
Bismarck?s legacy of Machiavellianism.?
Although acknowledging the Empire as an achievement of ?historic
greatness? and acknowledging it as a ?precious memory,? Meinecke claims that
the empire ceded too much to the militarist instincts of its founder and that
Bismarck?s use of the militarist instinct was all that people identified as his
gift to Germany but that his real legacy was noteworthy for his shrewd and
circumspect manipulation of the Prussian instinct.? Indeed, the pro-Bismarck Meinecke passes over the Kulturkampf hurriedly
as he rushes to exonerate the greatest of the German statesmen.? Although I would agree that Bismarck was a
great statesman and that his legacy was of militarism, I would not say that it
was a unique legacy, but one that he was himself left by the eighteenth century
kings of Prussia.? I would also reckon
that the Prussian militarism is overstated by Meinecke.In chapter
eight Meinecke clarifies his theories about chance and general tendencies.? Meinecke expresses the rather vague, if
accurate, view that general tendency, trends and patterns can be interfered
with by individuals, but that sometimes individuals are swept along with the
tide of history.? Meinecke notes
Hitler?s prescribed aims as being the reversal of Versailles, a solution to the
Jewish question and an end to the depression.?
The power of these three ideas (and the spectre of communism) in appealing
to the electorate, is powerful indeed, although the anti-Semitic aspect should
probably not rank with the other three factors in its provenance.? The chance that Hitler was given these axes
to grind and a demagogic power so intense brought him electoral power. Meinecke notes
other instances of chance working for Hitler.?
The election of Hugenberg to the leadership of the DNVP in June 1930 was
won by chance as some opponents of his were not there to cast their votes ?
votes which would have lost Hugenberg the election.? The election allowed the formation of the National Opposition (to
the Young Plan) and then the formal Harzburg Front of October 1931.? This gave Hitler a majority in parliament in
1933, but had Hugenberg?s opponents turned up so much could have been
different. Hitler?s
appointment is another ?chance? in Meinecke?s eyes.? The ?un-needed? appointment which followed no trend or pattern
was the result, in Meinecke?s eyes, of von Hindenburg?s weakness.? His inability to deal with his son, Schleicher,
Muller, Papen and Bruning is hardly a weakness so much as a lack of
strength.? Meinecke notes the successes
in reversing Versailles, in rebuilding the economy, in securing allied support
for an increased military, in setting up rival youth groups to the Hitler Youth
and in the elections of November 1932 which were much reduced on their previous
standing.? The general trend (despite
the result of the elections in Lippe-Detmold) was against the Nazis, and Meinecke
is probably right in agreeing with Julius Strasser who believed that Hitler had
?missed the boat? in January 1933 and that the Nazis were on the way to
obscurity like the DDP before them..Meinecke
attributes the final trigger of the Deutsche Katastrophe to Hindenberg?s
weak character and his inability to stand up for the Weimar Republic, as have
so many other historians.? This is a
conclusion which I accept.? However, the
growth of the homo faber class, the primacy of militarism, the end of
the reasonable human nature and the view that Nazism was not a specifically
?German? event, yet was apparently born of German characteristics in Germany
and nowhere else I do not accept.
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