November
9 marks the 80th anniversary of Kristallnacht, the pogrom ordered by
Adolf Hitler in which more than 1,000 synagogues were set on fire or destroyed,
and at least 91 Jews murdered, in more than 1,000 cities and towns across
Germany.
Most
articles and books about Hitler deal with his anti-Semitism and military
aggression.
But
Hitler also concerned himself with cultural matters as soon as he became
chancellor of Germany.
In
September 1933 he promised that the Nazi state would intervene more actively in
these than the Weimar Republic had done.
This,
he contended, would be necessary in order to make art an expression of the
“hereditary racial bloodstock” and to transform artists into defenders of the
German Volk.
From
1933 to 1945, the Reich Chamber of Culture exercised a profound influence over
hundreds of thousands of German artists and entertainers in the fields of
music, theatre and the visual arts.
States,
declared Hitler, had the sacred duty to defend national art against the
degenerative force of global cosmopolitanism.
He
purged the German section of PEN International of “leftist” and Jewish writers.
When PEN International protested, Hitler dissolved the German section
altogether at the end of 1933.
Jewish
composers and music, too, were banned. The Berlin and Vienna
Philharmonics fired their Jewish members and ceased to perform the music of
Jewish composers.
While Jewish performers fled, eminent men like Karl
Bohm, Wilhelm Furtwangler, Walter Gieseking, Herbert von Karajan, and Richard
Strauss stayed behind and served the Reich.
The
Vienna orchestra would become a fixture at the Nuremberg Nazi Party rallies.
Just after the German army overran Poland, it performed in Krakow, under the
baton of Furtwangler, who called music the art that expressed the soul of the
nation most completely.
The
Berlin Philharmonic, within a couple of weeks of the occupation of France,
staged three concerts in Paris and Versailles.
The
admiration that Austro-German classical musicians had for Hitler is not
entirely surprising since he was a well-informed music lover who declared in
1938 that “Germany has become the guardian of European culture and
civilization.”
Movies,
too, needed to be restored to “Aryan” control. According to Ofer Ashkenazi, in his book Weimar Film and Modern Jewish
Identity, cinema in Germany prior to the Nazi takeover was a
crucial space for “the contemplation and exhibition of Jewish experience in
Germany” and a significant body of films (mostly by Jewish filmmakers) worked
“to promote the formation of a liberal, multicultural, transnational bourgeois society, in which ‘the Jew’ could be
different, but equal.”
This was
obviously unacceptable to the Nazis. Film became an important ingredient in the toxic brew
of Nazi propaganda.
The
German film industry came under the complete control of the Ministry of Popular
Enlightenment and Propaganda. Its head, Joseph Goebbels, believed ideological
indoctrination worked best when conveyed through entertainment, so Nazi cinema
put forth its political propaganda in the form of genre films such as comedies,
musicals, and melodramas.
The
most famous and controversial films produced were documentaries by Leni
Riefenstahl. She directed films that extolled the values of physical beauty and
Aryan superiority. Triumph of the Will, a celebration of a 1934 Nazi
rally in Nuremberg, is one notorious example.
The
Nazis also saw modern art as “Jewish-Bolshevist” and condemned it. This
culminated in the Degenerate Art Exhibition in Munich in 1937, where Hitler
delivered a speech declaring “merciless war” on cultural disintegration. It included 650 works of
art confiscated from 32 German museums.
The
exhibition handbook explained that the aim of the show was to “reveal the
philosophical, political, racial and moral goals and intentions behind this
movement, and the driving forces of corruption which follow them.”
Whole movements were labeled as “diseased,” including
Expressionism, Impressionism, New Objectivity, Surrealism, and Cubism. Many of
Germany’s most talented and innovative artists suffered official defamation.
With this exhibition, the visual arts were forced into
complete submission to censorship and Nazi “coordination.”
Initiated by Goebbels and by President of the Reich Chamber
of the Visual Arts Adolf Ziegler, the exhibition travelled to twelve other
cities from 1937 to 1941. In all, the show drew more than three million
visitors.
Some
of the artists featured in the exhibition are now considered among the greats
of modern art.
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