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Review: The Hitler Conspiracies

An excursion through five episodes of the Nazi period by the distinguished Cambridge historian, Sir Richard Evans

October 30, 2020 11:07
Dame Myra Hess  GettyImages-862247526
2 min read

The Hitler Conspiracies: The Third Reich and the Paranoid Imagination by Richard J. Evans (Allen Lane, £20)

The Hitler Conspiracies is a compelling book about “fantasies and fictions, fabrications and falsifications” — an excursion through five episodes of the Nazi period by the distinguished Cambridge historian, Sir Richard Evans. It colours in the background to today’s “paranoid style”, which wages war on expertise and where “alternative facts” are promoted as being no different from alternative interpretations.

Evans deconstructs the mythology surrounding such phenomena as the antisemitic forgery, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion; Germany’s “Stab in the Back” defeat in the First World War; the burning down of the Reichstag in 1934; the flight of Rudolf Hess to Scotland in 1941; and Hitler’s wondrous escape to Argentina by submarine at the end of the war. He meticulously traces the evolution of lies and nostrums surrounding these and is rightly unsparing in castigating the opportunists who bend history so that it perfectly matches their own conspiratorial mania.

The Protocols evolved out of the French Revolution’s attack on the Catholic church — and the reaction to the promotion of equal rights for Jews. The Protocols did not refer to Jews in typical antisemitic terms as ritual murderers and the poisoners of wells but saw them as subversive instigators of division in society — defenders of liberalism and socialism, upholders of academic endeavour and freedom of expression in the press.