Hitler industry grows ever weirder

A demand for more works on the Third Reich has created the genre of the 'trashademic', where trash meets academic studies, writes…

A demand for more works on the Third Reich has created the genre of the 'trashademic', where trash meets academic studies, writes Derek Scally.

Hitler is big box office. That's the likely message from the weekend box office receipts for Downfall, the German Hitler film that went on release yesterday.

More than five million Germans saw the film, well timed by its producer to capitalise on the coming 60th anniversary of the end of the second World War.

It comes at a time of an extraordinary glut of "Hitler news", an increasingly trivial fuel to feed the apparent growing interest in the dictator as the period retreats further into history. Leading German newspaper columnist Jens Jessen describes this latest wave as "the Third Reich, second-hand".

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"We are witnessing a change. The last eye-witnesses are dying out, and historians and artists are now turning to the archives to present the era in whatever way they want," he says. "But what you miss as a result is the confusion of the time, the fact that things weren't so black and white."

Downfall does an admirable job of capturing the chaos of the last days of the war, even though it presents events to the audience from the limited perspective of the poorly ventilated Führer bunker adjacent to the Brandenburg Gate.

It is an exhaustingly thorough film. The film-makers have done their work and spent a lot of money, and it's all up there on the screen. It is an important contribution to the ongoing debate in Germany, but it is neither "the" Hitler film, nor is it a historical documentary made by some government-sponsored foundation. It is a commercial blockbuster created to make money.

Still, the motives of the producer of Downfall seem pure compared to the rest of the Hitler industry. Every night of the week, without fail, a variation on the Hitler Show is running somewhere on German television. News magazines Der Spiegel and Stern appear to have made Hitler their new poster boy.

"Hitler is the strongest drug you can employ to boost sales," remarks Jessen. Even publishers are falling over each other to get "their" Hitler book to market to the atonal accompaniment of the barrel being scraped.

Last month we had Hitler's Bomb, presenting what its publisher called the "sensational results of the latest historical research" that would rewrite the history books and solve the last riddle of the second World War that Hitler did indeed succeed in building his Wunderwaffe, "wonder weapon". The book's main thesis is that Nazi scientists conducted three nuclear tests in Germany in the last days of the war without attracting any attention.

The problem is that this breathless revelation doesn't stand up: witnesses are unbelievable, the documents are ambiguous and the apparent test sites show no sign of the explosion of an atom bomb.

The book is definitely to be filed on the shelf with other entertaining but fictional works like the Hitler diaries and the "Hitler was gay" biography.

Yet Hitler's Bomb was front-page news in Germany's Bild newspaper, and made its way into many British newspapers. The revelation, days later, of the book's many flaws did not. But that didn't matter, the bandwagon had already moved on to the Hitler File, a "sensational work" based on a file prepared for Stalin and based on KGB interrogation of Hitler's valet and aide-de-camp.

This book reads like an precursor to Hello!-style journalism, reporting the most trivial details of the dictator's last days with breathtaking reverence. Hitler scratched his neck until it bled. Hitler demanded that his toilet water was constantly checked for traces of poison. The banality matches the observation of the SS officer-turned-playwright in Mel Brooks's farce The Producers that "the Führer was a terrific dancer".

But Mel Brooks was playing Hitler for laughs, while these books want to be taken seriously. It doesn't seem to matter that the information in the Hitler File is reheated and that the file's contents, printed in German news magazines in 1995, was unappetising the first time round. The sensation about Nazi history is more important than normal historical considerations, and Hitler's Bomb and the Hitler File are just the latest in the academic-meets-trash trend: trashademic.

The standard defence of publishers and journalists is that they are feeding a public interest, demand even, for Hitler stories.

So why not examine the still unexplored areas of Germany's Nazi history? Earlier this month, researchers at Germany's leading scientific organisation, the Max Planck Institute, issued the first report yet documenting the shameful extent of the scientist collaboration with the Nazi regime, in particular the pseudo-science of Josef Mengele. But apparently that's no way of making the cover of Bild or Der Spiegel.

What's interesting, disturbing even, in all of this is how the notions of the two Hitlers - the German Hitler and the British Hitler - slowly appear to be merging. Like Auschwitz, this latest Hitler wave risks decoupling the dictator from the Nazi movement and the historical framework and reforming him into a standalone symbol for ultimate evil, and human fascination with evil.

"For me even poorly proven Hitler headlines in the mainstream press are better than it becoming the property of extremists," says Sven Felix Kellerhoff, historical editor of Die Welt newspaper. "We have the responsibility, the obligation to deal with this chapter of German history and to inform people about it.

"But we cannot allow ourselves to become involved in Hitler myth-building in the British style, but it is what's happening."