German interest in the darkest chapter of their history seems stronger than it has ever been as the country marks several key anniversaries this year linked to the Nazi era.On TV talk shows, in newspapers and online, people endlessly debate the Nazi era - from what their own grandparents did and saw, to how the regime's legacy constrains German peacekeepers on overseas missions today, or why unemployed Greek and Spanish protesters lampoon Chancellor Angela Merkel as a new Hitler.
I am wondering why there is such a fascination with WWII Nazism and Hitler even today within Western society. Here are some reasons/guesses that could potentially explain it:- The present vs. the past - Major cultural changes and attitudes in the West over the past 70 years make it increasingly difficult to understand how the rise of Nazism was ever possible. Attempting to understand this mystery of the nature of man and his political choices has led to greater interest in the topic. - The presence of a single cult figure - Hitler has been identified as the single person in whom WWII Nazism can be defined/blamed. This makes it more appealing to study than, say, earlier wars. - An eccentric leader - Hitler has become derided and parodied so much in modern times that he has become almost a comic figure (think of the Hitler meme that came out over the past few years, or the "Hipster Hitler" cartoon). This inevitably changes perceptions of the man, and actually garners a more sympathetic view of him than he had before.- Fascination with darkness - people today are fascinated by dark chapters in human life which contrast with the normal, sanitized world which most people live in. Just as horror films have increased in popularity over the past several decades, more people are interested in macabre chapters in human history. - German response to their past - I am guessing that the fierce response by Germans to quash this chapter in their history has made it somewhat taboo, which only serves to make it more desirable.- Disillusionment of the present age - Decades after the fall of Nazism, the present age fails to offer an entirely satisfactory model for Germans or others. Despite the moral disasters presented by Nazism, it can be said to have produced a utopian vision of the future which may be admirable to some in form, rather than in content.
I spend a large part of my time around Germans and I have not heard any of them talking about it. Yes, it is all over the media but I get the impression that is just hype. All those history channel shows have been getting shown over here too but they have their share of black helicopter type show too. I think I have had more people ask me about Roswell, Area 51, Afghanistan, Obama, and Iraq than want to talk about the Nazis. I get the sense that the biggest part of it is that they are losing a generation who never talked and now they want the remaining people to get their stories down so they are not completely lost.I definitely don't get the impression that they are fascinated by the Nazis, at least not any more so than Americans are.
I figured you would have insight into this more than anyone else here. Even aside from Germany, though, there is a fascination with WWII in the States. I'm not positive it is any more than it was, say, 20 years ago, but then again I'm not sure you'd have someone like Quentin Tarantino making a violent comedy on WWII back then like he did in the past few years.
I think you are right in that interest in WWII is no higher now than it was 20-30 years ago. I also think that Inglorious Bastards was more a reflection of the coarsening of public discourse than anything more profound.