Historikerstreit
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The Historikersteit (historians' quarrel[1]) was an intellectual and political controversy in West Germany about the way the Holocaust should be interpreted in history. (The German word streit translates variously as 'quarrel', 'dispute', 'conflict'. The most common translation of "historikerstreit" in English language academic discourse is perhaps "historians' dispute"; but often, the German term itself is used.) It took place between 1986-1989, and pitted left-wing intellectuals against right-wing intellectuals. The debate attracted much media attention in West Germany with its participants frequently giving television interviews and writing co-op pieces in newspapers. Its embers flared up again briefly in 2000[2] when one of the leading figures, Ernst Nolte, was awarded a literary prize.
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[edit] Origins
Immediately after World War II, there arose intense historical debates (which continue to this day) both in Germany and abroad about how best to interpret Nazi Germany. Two of the more hotly debated questions were whether Nazism was in some way part of the “German national character”, and how much responsibility if any the German people bore for the crimes of Nazism. Most non-German historians in the immediate post-war era such as A. J. P. Taylor and Sir Lewis Namier argued that Nazism was the culmination of German history and that the vast majority of Germans were responsible for Nazi crimes.
Within West Germany at this time, most historians adopted a strongly defensive tone. In the assessment of Gerhard Ritter and others, Nazism was a totalitarian movement that represented only the work of a small criminal clique, Germans were victims of Nazism, and the Nazi era represented a total break in German history. Starting in the 1960s, this assessment came under challenge by a younger generation of historians. Fritz Fischer argued in favor of a Sonderweg conception of German history that saw Nazism as the inevitable result of the way German society had developed. Likewise, the late 1960s and early 1970s saw the emergence of the functionalist school of historiography, which argued that medium and lower ranking German officials were not just obeying orders and policies, but actively engaged in the making of the policies that led to the Holocaust. The functionalists thereby cast blame for the Holocaust wider than it had been previously. Many right-wing German historians strongly disliked the implications of the Sonderweg conception and functionalist school, both of which were generally identified with the left, and which they saw as being derogatory toward Germany.
By the mid-1980s, right-wing German historians started to feel enough time had passed and it was time for Germans to start celebrating their history again. An example of this attitude is Michael Stürmer's 1986 article “Land without history” bemoaning what Stürmer saw as the absence of positive history in which Germans could take pride. The fact that Stürmer was serving as an advisor and speechwriter to the West German Chancellor, Helmut Kohl sharpened the controversy created by his remarks. At the same time, many left-wing German historians disliked what they saw as the more nationalistic tone of the Kohl government.
The debate opened on June 6, 1986 when the philosopher and historian Ernst Nolte wrote an article in the newspaper, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung entitled Die Vergangenheit, die nicht vergehen will ("The past that does not want to pass away"). Nolte argued that the "race murder" of the Nazi death camps was a "defensive reaction" to the "class murder" of the Stalinist system of gulags. In his view, the gulags were the original and greater horror. In the face of the threat of Bolshevism, it was reasonable that the German people would turn to Nazism fascism. He had in fact articulated this in a 1985 essay[3]: "Auschwitz . . . was above all a reaction born out of the annihilating occurrences of the Russian Revolution . . . the so-called [sic] annihilation of the Jews during the Third Reich was a reaction or a distorted copy and not a first act or an original".
The left-wing philosopher Jürgen Habermas, responding shortly in the newspaper, Die Zeit, rejected this position, arguing that it could be seized upon as "a kind of cancelling out of damages" for the Holocaust (which phrase he used as the article's title and would use the following year as title of an anthology of his recent political writings)[4]. In this article, Habermas also complained that certain historians such as Ernst Nolte, Michael Stürmer and Andreas Hillgruber were seeking to whitewash the German past.
[edit] Issues
The views of Ernst Nolte and Jürgen Habermas were at the center of the debate, which was conducted almost exclusively through articles and letters to the editor in the newspapers Die Zeit and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. The debate excited immense interest in West Germany, where historians enjoy more prestige then they do in the English-speaking world. The debate was noted for its highly vitriolic and aggressive tone with the participants often staging savage personal attacks against the participants on the other side.[citation needed]
An important sub-issue was triggered by Hillgruber's 1986 book Two kinds of collapse: the destruction of the German reich and the end of European Jewry, which lamented the ethnic cleansing (to use a term which did not come into existence until 1993) of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe after World War II and compared these mass expulsions to the Holocaust. Hillgruber was not a supporter of Nolte, and the controversy over Zweierlei Untergang only became linked to the controversy over Nolte's view when Habermas and Wehler lumped Nolte and Hillgruber together as conservatives trying to minimize Nazi crimes.
The debate centered on four main questions:
- Were the crimes of Nazi Germany uniquely evil in history, or were the crimes of Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union just as evil, if not more so?
- Did German history follow a "special path" leading inevitably to Nazism? If so, then most or all of pre-1945 German history bore the taint of the Nazism to come. Furthermore, the validity of the Sonderweg analysis would undermine Nolte's argument that the Holocaust was a defensive reaction to Soviet crimes, and would instead suggest that the origins of Nazism predate World War I. The West German historians Klaus Hildebrand, Gerhard Ritter, and Andreas Hillgruber rejected the Sonderweg view, while the British historian A. J. P. Taylor and the West German historians Hans-Ulrich Wehler, Wolfgang Mommsen, Hans Mommsen and Fritz Fischer supported it.
- A sub-issue of the Sonderweg concerned the reasons for the alleged Sonderweg. Stürmer argued for geographical factors as the reason for the Sonderweg while Wehler insisted on cultural and social factors.
- Were other genocides, including the Armenian genocide and the Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia, comparable to the Holocaust? Many felt that these comparisons tended to trivialize the Holocaust, but others maintained that the Holocaust could best be understood in the context of the 20th century by means of these comparisons.
- Were the crimes of the Nazis a reaction to Soviet crimes under Stalin, as Nolte contended? Should the German people bear a special burden of guilt for Nazi crimes, or could new generations of Germans find sources of pride in their history?
[edit] Participants
Identified with the "left" side of the "quarrel" were the philosopher Jürgen Habermas, and the historians Hans-Ulrich Wehler, Jürgen Kocka, Hans Mommsen, Martin Broszat, Heinrich August Winkler, Eberhard Jäckel, and Wolfgang Mommsen. Identified with the "right" side were the philosopher Ernst Nolte, the journalist Joachim Fest, and the historians Andreas Hillgruber, Klaus Hildebrand, Rainer Zitelmann and Michael Stürmer. The label "right" for this group is not entirely accurate because while Hildebrand and Fest were close supporters of Nolte, both Hillgruber and Stürmer kept their distance from him. A rare effort at compromise was attempted by Karl Dietrich Bracher and Richard Löwenthal, who argued that comparing different totalitarian systems was a valid intellectual exercise, thereby agreeing with one of the central planks of the right camp, but who insisted further that the Holocaust should not be compared to other genocides, thereby agreeing with one of the central planks of the left camp.
There were a few foreign historians also became involved. The British historians Richard J. Evans and Ian Kershaw sided with the left-wing position while the American historian Gordon A. Craig was sharply critical of Nolte's views, but generally defended Hillgruber.
[edit] See also
- Vergangenheitsbewältigung (coming to terms with the past)
[edit] Notes
- ^ Janausch
- ^ Cohen, New York Times
- ^ Nolte 1985, 36
- ^ Habermas 1986; this article was anthologized in Habermas 1987
[edit] Bibliography
The voluminous academic literature on the Historikerstreit includes multiple anthologies of the major interventions. Some of these anthologies are Augstein 1993 [1987], Habermas 1987, and New German Critique 1988 listed below.
- Aly, Götz. 2006. The logic of horror, June 12, 2006 German original in Die Zeit on June 1, 2006).
- Augstein, Rudolf, et al. 1993 [1987]. Forever in the shadow of Hitler? : original documents of the Historikerstreit, the controversy concerning the singularity of the Holocaust. Atlantic Highlands, N.J. : Humanities Press. (English language edition of "Historikerstreit": Die Dokumentation der Kontroverse um die Einzigartigkeit der nationalsozialistschen Judenvernichtung, Munich: Piper.)
- Baldwin, Peter. 1990. Hitler, the Holocaust and the Historians Dispute. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.
- Cohen, Roger. 2000. Hitler Apologist Wins German Honor, and a Storm Breaks Out. New York Times, June 21, 2000.
- Craig, Gordon. 1987. The War of the German Historians. New York Review of Books, February 15, 1987, 16-19.
- Eley, Geoff. 1988. Nazism, Politics and the Image of the Past: Thoughts on the West German Historikerstreit 1986–1987. Past and Present, 1988 Nov., 121: 171–208.
- Evans, Richard. 1989. In Hitler's Shadow: West German Historians and the Attempt to Escape the Nazi Past, New York, NY: Pantheon.
- Habermas, Jürgen. 1986. Eine Art Schadenabwicklung: Die apologetischen Tendenzen in der deutschen Zeitgeschichtsschreibung [A kind of canceling out of damages: the apologistic tendencies in contemporary German historical writing]. Die Zeit, 18 July 18, 1986.
- Habermas, Jürgen. 1987. Eine art Schadensabwicklung: kleine politische schriften VI. Frankfurt a.M: Suhrkamp.
- Hillgruber, Andreas. 1986. Zweierlei Untergang: Die Zerschlagung des Deutschen Reichs und das Ende des europäischen Judentums [Two kinds of collapse: the destruction of the German reich and the end of European Jewry], Berlin: Siedler.
- Hirschfeld, Gerhard. 1987. Erasing the Past? History Today, 1987 Aug., 37(8): 8-10.
- New German Critique. Special Issue on the Historikerstreit. 1988 Spring - Summer, v. 44.
- Jarausch, Konrad H. 1988. Removing the Nazi stain? The quarrel of the historians. German Studies Review, 1988 May, 11(2): 285-301.
- Kershaw, Ian. 1989. The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems and Perspectives of Interpretations, London: Arnold.
- Kühnl, Reinhard (editor). 1987. Vergangenheit, die nicht vergeht: Die "Historikerdebatte": Darstellung, Dokumentation, Kritik. Cologne: Pahl-Rugenstein.
- Maier, Charles. 1988. The Unmasterable Past: History, Holocaust and German National Identity, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Muller, Jerry. 1989. German Historians At War.Commentary, 1989 May, 87(5): 33-42.
- Nolte, Ernst. 1985. Between myth and revisionism. In H. W. Koch (ed.), Aspects of the Third Reich. London: Macmillan.
- Nolte, Ernst. 1986. Die Verganengheit, die nicht vergehen will. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, June 6, 1986.
- Nolte, Ernst. 1987. Das Vergehen der Vergangenhiet: Antwort an meine Kritiker im sogenannten Historikerstreit, Berlin: Ullstein.
- Alfred Sohn-Rethel. 1978. Economy and Class Structure of German Fascism,London, CSE Books.
- Stürmer, Michael. 1986. Land ohne geschichte [Land without a history].[citation needed]
- A. J. P. Taylor. 1980. Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848-1918. Oxford University Press.
- A. J. P. Taylor. 1997. The Origins of the Second World War. Longman
- Wehler, Hans-Ulrich. 1988. Entsorgung der deutschen Vergangenheit? Ein polemischer Essay zum "Historikerstreit" Munich: C.H. Beck.
[edit] External links
- Nolte's article in FAZ Republished by the German government's German Historical Museum.
- Nolte interviewed in 1994 by the organ of the Holocaust denial movement, the Institute for Historical Review.
Categories: Articles which may be biased | Cleanup from June 2006 | All pages needing cleanup | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Fascist/Nazi era scholars and writers | Historiography | Vergangenheitsbewältigung | West Germany | History of Germany