THE ENABLERS
The New Yorker|March 25, 2024
Hitler didn't grab power; he was given it.
ADAM GOPNIK
THE ENABLERS

Hitler is so fully imagined a subject—so obsessively present on our televisions and in our bookstores—that to reimagine him seems pointless. As with the Hollywood fascination with Charles Manson, speculative curiosity gives retrospective glamour to evil. Hitler created a world in which women were transported with their children for days in closed train cars and then had to watch those children die alongside them, naked, gasping for breath in a gas chamber. To ask whether the man responsible for this was motivated by reading Oswald Spengler or merely by meeting him seems to attribute too much complexity of purpose to him, not to mention posthumous dignity. Yet allowing the specifics of his ascent to be clouded by disdain is not much better than allowing his memory to be ennobled by mystery.

This story is from the March 25, 2024 edition of The New Yorker.

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This story is from the March 25, 2024 edition of The New Yorker.

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