Monday, August 21, 2006

The Scarlet Swastika

By Hadleyblogger Drew

The man on the left is Günter Grass: Nobel-prize winning novelist, author of the magnificently disturbing The Tin Drum and other books, pacifist and long-time anti-American activist. And, apparently, former Nazi.

My purpose here isn’t to recap what’s been written in the wake of the recent revelation that Grass had been a member of the S.S. during World War II. Rather, I’ve been asked to contribute a few pieces on the stigma which the word “Nazi” still carries today (a sort of Scarlet Swastika, if you will), as a follow-up to the recent story on opera star Elisabeth Schwarzkopf. Virtually every obit noted Schwarzkopf’s past membership in the Nazi party (which she dismissed as something “everyone” had done), even though the question of her involvement with the Nazis had nothing to do with that for which she was best-known, her work in music. (Yes, I’m aware that one could argue her continued ability to engage in music during the war might have been a result of privileges accorded her as a result of her membership, but I’m going to say that’s stretching things farther than I care to go.)

While Schwarzkopf was an interpreter of art rather than a creator of it (which diminishes the significance of the revelation, at least in terms of its relevance to the art itself) there are others who could be said to be creators, and the question then becomes whether or not one can separate the influence of ideology from the creation itself. As Terry Teachout puts it in his thought-provoking Wall Street Journal piece, "The work is what matters most...but artists are human, too." If there is to be a Scarlet Swastika, this is where it may show the most - in the interpretation of the artist's work. But, true or not, is it always warranted?

Which brings us back to Günter Grass. I hadn’t been intending to include Grass in my series, but the timing of this story was too much to pass up. And it ties in to one of the central questions we ask, if an obvious one: is there a double standard regarding the treatment and consideration of past affiliations, whether they be youthful indiscretions or fervent beliefs? There are already those wondering if the left will give Grass a free pass due to his political ideology – a pass that might not be available to someone with, let’s say, a less liberal bent. That Scarlet Hammer & Sickle doesn’t seem to burn quite as brightly as the Swastika does, especially if you’re still part of the liberal brotherhood (witness the cult of personality that still surrounds Alger Hiss, unlike the vituperation aimed at former members like Whittaker Chambers, who renounced Communism in all its ideological forms). Will people take a second look at The Tin Drum in the same way that so many on the left want to rethink, say, The Passion of the Christ? Should they?

It seems as if there aren’t many things that society holds against you any more. Being a former Nazi is one of them. In our post-literate society the word itself is thrown around with reckless abandon, to the point that it’s lost most of its original meaning. But the glow from the Scarlet Swastika is still there, and it would seem as if any discussion of the relationship between art and Nazi politics would, sooner or later, come round to Leni Riefenstahl. That's where I had planned to start this series, but instead it's where I'll continue it in a future piece.

1 comment:

  1. You ask a lot of qood questions? There is more power in questions than in answers.

    A couple of thoughts on what it must have been like to have been a 16 year old boy in Germany in the early 1940s. I don't expect that they saw too many copies of the London Times or listened to too many hours of the BBC.

    People today know nothing of history but shallow stereotypes. And they proceed from the assumption that that boy (or girl) possessed the information that we do today.

    That's foolish and shows a great deal of their ignorance.

    There is a great deal of difference between what a teen age boy would do when faced with a government and society telling him that he was needed for the Fatherland than what an Adolf Eichmann or a Dr. Josef Mengele did when employed in the bureaucracy responsible for running the death camps.

    Elisabeth Schwarzkopf was some years older, but I doubt that aspiring opera singers in wartime or peacetime, spend a lot of time reading the newspapers and debating government policies with their pals.

    Even though they did not directly contribute to Nazi atrocities (that we know of), Guenther Grass and Schwarzkopf should have admitted their Nazi associations. But they thought they could get away with it. And they almost did. I don't know what I would have done had I been in their shoes.

    The situation gets a lot more dicey when you are talking about a 30 year old Ukrainian peasant with fresh memories of the forced starvation deaths of much of his family and millions of other countrymen, volunteering to help the invading Nazis guard Soviet soldiers, Communist officials and Russian Jewish prisoners in concentration and death camps.

    I'm glad that I was never called upon to sit on that court.

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