[QUOTE=antwhiplash;2464533]A very interesting lecture, thankyou for the link.
I have read a few opinions on downfall from historians, film makers & intellectuals & although a few were very much against the film being shown, most of them thought that the film modernised the view of Hitler & by humanising him & the Nazi heirarchy made him all the more evil. I agree with them that in the past Hitler has been betrayed as almost superhuman and as such has been a figure more likely to be attractive to Neo Nazis. By being portrayed as very human in Downfall it actually has the opposite effect, it makes him seem all too human, almost pathetic, very lost & hardly a character a Neo Nazi would hold up as some superhuman being to be followed even after all these years.
The lecture also brought up something that i was discussing recently with my fiance. How will future generations view Hitler? This was because i was thinking about how we view the Roman Empire now. Although it was one of the most evil regimes ever it is now viewed more for it's inventions & military genius & not for making a sport from genocide, even hitler didn't go that far!
Fascinating.
He will be placed in line with all the 'greats' of history.. Alexander, Richard the Lionheart, Ceaser, Napoleon, Frederick die grosse, Bismarck, Hindenburg ...
sadly Kershaw relies very little, if at all on research, first hand interviews, plagerism, and in that respect limits his knowledge to an intellectual and personal argument. Look at all the acknowledgements at the back!!!
'Hitlers War', ...... now thats a book!!!
David Irving has without doubt risen above all other's attempts to explain the man. His work will always remain the definitive account of his life and career.
I have read a few opinions on downfall from historians, film makers & intellectuals & although a few were very much against the film being shown, most of them thought that the film modernised the view of Hitler & by humanising him & the Nazi heirarchy made him all the more evil. I agree with them that in the past Hitler has been betrayed as almost superhuman and as such has been a figure more likely to be attractive to Neo Nazis. By being portrayed as very human in Downfall it actually has the opposite effect, it makes him seem all too human, almost pathetic, very lost & hardly a character a Neo Nazi would hold up as some superhuman being to be followed even after all these years.
The lecture also brought up something that i was discussing recently with my fiance. How will future generations view Hitler? This was because i was thinking about how we view the Roman Empire now. Although it was one of the most evil regimes ever it is now viewed more for it's inventions & military genius & not for making a sport from genocide, even hitler didn't go that far!
Fascinating.
He will be placed in line with all the 'greats' of history.. Alexander, Richard the Lionheart, Ceaser, Napoleon, Frederick die grosse, Bismarck, Hindenburg ...
sadly Kershaw relies very little, if at all on research, first hand interviews, plagerism, and in that respect limits his knowledge to an intellectual and personal argument. Look at all the acknowledgements at the back!!!
'Hitlers War', ...... now thats a book!!!
David Irving has without doubt risen above all other's attempts to explain the man. His work will always remain the definitive account of his life and career.
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