Jens Westemeier

Jens Westemeier
Ph.D.
Born 1966 (age 5051)
West Germany
Occupation Historian, author, military officer in the Bundeswehr
Awards Werner Hahlweg Prize, 2012
Academic background
Alma mater University of Regensburg
Academic work
Era 20th century
Institutions Center for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr
University of Potsdam
Main interests Modern European history, military history, historiography

Jens Westemeier (b. 1966) is a German historian and author who specialises in military history and the history of the Nazi era. He has published several books on topics relating to the Waffen-SS and its personnel and commanders.

In 2014, Westemeier researched the Waffen-SS past of the German romanist and academic Hans Robert Jauß leading to the re-evaluation of the latter's past. Westemeir's research also includes the representation of the German war effort in popular culture.

Education and career

After graduating from high school (Gymnasium), Westemeier served in the German Armed Forces (Bundeswehr) attaining the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the German Special Forces. He served as a United Nations Military Observer, including in Yugoslavia, Kosovo and Afghanistan in the 1990s and 2000s.[1]

Westemeier studied history and political sciences at the University of Regensburg, graduating in 1997. He then worked at the Center for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr (MGFA at that time), where he undertook research on Joachim Peiper, the former adjutant of Heinrich Himmler.[2] In 2009, Westermeier received his Ph.D. at the Department of Military History / Cultural History of Violence at the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Potsdam with his thesis Himmlers Krieger ("Himmler's Warrior"), a biography of Peiper. In 2012, Westermeier was awarded the Werner Hahlweg Prize, the award for achievements in military history. In 2014 Westemeier became a lecturer at the Historical Institute at the University of Potsdam.[3]

Historian of Nazi Germany

Reviewing Himmlers Krieger, historian and journalist Sven Felix Kellerhoff described Himmlers Krieger as a "brilliant biographical study".[4] Historian Bastian Hein suggested that the book would "provide immunity against any myths about [Peiper's] Waffen-SS career."[5] Westemeier has also conducted research on the SS-Junkerschule. He rejects the notion that the graduates of the SS schools were a military elite. According to Westemeier, the close networking among the graduates enabled them to successfully obtain positions in close proximity to Himmler and Hitler. Ideologically homogeneous, this group produced a number of later war criminals such as Peiper, Walter Reder, and Fritz Knoechlein. The network survived the end of the war and contributed to the creation of HIAG, the Wafffe-SS lobby group which had a considerable impact on the image of the Waffen-SS in popular culture.[6] Westemeir's research on the topic appeared in the 2014 collection of essays Die Waffen-SS. Neue Forschungen ("The Waffen-SS: New Research") edited by Bernd Wegner and Peter Lieb.[7]

In 2014, he was commissioned by the University of Konstanz to research the political past of the novelist Hans Robert Jauß. During Westemeier's research has demonstrated that the latter was most likely involved in war crimes (as company commander in the SS Unit Charlemagne in 1943), that he falsified documents and had glossed over his biography. Westemeier expanded on his work to later publish the book Hans Robert Jauß. Jugend, Krieg und Internierung ("Hans Robert Jauss. Youth, war and internment").[8]

Westemeier is a contributor to the Military History Working Group, the German association for interdisciplinary war studies and military history. In this capacity, he organised the 2016 conference "The Image of the German Landser in Popular Culture and Popular Science" (So war der deutsche Landser), supported by the Center for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr and the publishing house Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh. The conference presented new research on the representation of the German war effort in film, television, and popular literature, including by such authors as Franz Kurowski and Trevor James Constable. According to the recap of the conference in H-Soz-Kult, the conference has "impressively showed that even after 20 years following the controversial Wehrmacht Exhibition, it's still necessary to dispel the traditional myths". The reviewer also finds that the event "offered insights into new research approaches that counteract the spread of popular representations of the Wehrmacht".[9]

Works

Books and monographs

Contributions

References

  1. Jens Westemeier, Berliner Colloquien, a project of the Hamburg Institute for Social Research in cooperation with the Einstein Forum, Potsdam
  2. Gerhard Köbler: Westemeier, Jens, Himmlers Krieger. Joachim Peiper und die Waffen-SS in Krieg und Nachkriegszeit, koeblergerhard.de, abgerufen am 29. Dezember 2016; Niels Weise: Ein Nazi bis zuletzt. In: Einsicht 14 (2015), S. 67.
  3. Statement by the University of Konstanz
  4. Sven Felix Kellerhoff: 80 GIs wurden von der SS bei Malmedy ermordet, Welt Online, 17 December 2014.
  5. Bastian Hein: Jens Westemeier, Himmlers Krieger. Joachim Peiper und die Waffen-SS in Krieg und Nachkriegszeit. In: Historische Zeitschrift 299 (2014) 2, S. 557–559, hier: S. 559.
  6. Stephan Dehn: "Communitization and exclusion. New research on the history of the Waffen-SS", H-Soz-Kult, 11 March 2011
  7. Henning Pieper: "Book Reviews". The German Quarterly. Summer2015, Vol. 88 Issue 3, p378-419. 42p. DOI: 10.1111/gequ.10242.
  8. Ahlrich Meyer: "Fake documents, beautifully colored biography", Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 26 October 2016
  9. Laura Notheisen: "So was the German landser. The popular culture and popular science representation of the Wehrmacht", H-Soz-Kult, 31 January 2017


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