Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Review of Richard Bessel's Article on Nazi Violence


In “Political Violence and the Nazi Seizure of Power,” Richard Bessel examines the role violence played in helping Hitler and the Nazi party gain control of Germany in 1933.  Bessel’s article is more exploratory than persuasive.  About midway through the article, Bessel says the question is: “how important was political violence for putting Nazis in the saddle?” (p. 6).  Later, he asks:  “Who … was responsible for the wave of violence on which the Nazi’s rode to power … and why did it occur?” (p. 12).  Bessel admits that “the answers to these questions are far from clear” (p. 12).  One could say the same about the presentation of this article.  However, the point seems to come at the end, where Bessel discusses the “paradox” of Nazi violence as being both a promise of “radical change” while also “upholding … traditional values”; appealing to both “roughness and respectability;” and perhaps most significantly, providing an opportunity for unemployed young men to “prove their manliness,” while also giving structure to their lives (p. 15).  These apparent contradictions make this article a little difficult to follow, but also provide an insightful perspective about this critical moment in history.
Initially, Bessel says that historical views of Germany’s transfer of power to Hitler as being mostly peaceful, is “rather disingenuous” since the “Nazi activists did not shrink from violence; indeed they gloried in it” (Bessel, p. 1).  Bessel then describes several instances of S.A. storm trooper, “terror tactics” against Nazi opposition from the Communists and the powerful trade unions (p. 4).  Bessel implies that the views of other historical writers, such as Alan Bullock, reduced the role of S.A. brutality to mere “backstairs intrigue” (p. 2).  Therefore, Bessel seems to be pointing to “the spontaneous attacks by marauding bands of storm troopers,” as being a vital factor in Hitler’s takeover of Germany (p. 5).  In a related theme, Bessel implies that if Nazi opposition from the Communists and Social Democrats could have formed some kind of alliance, they might have been able to stop Hitler’s plans.  However, he then states that even if the “Left united and made a stand the outcome would [not] have been much better” (p. 5). 
Later, Bessel paints the storm trooper “terror campaign,” as a kind of testing the waters of their opposition, one that the Nazi party could “take full advantage of” when they were successful, but could also be safely “disowned” if  the “violent outbursts” met “stiff opposition” (p.7).  Bessel ends by stating that the “storm troopers generally steered well clear of out-and-out terrorism” and says the “violence in which the Nazis were engaged” was “limited” (p.15).  He provides detailed examples that support all claims being made, which could make Bessel’s overall argument seem either confusing or very thorough, depending on the reader’s view.
The message I understood from Bessel’s article is that young, macho, out of work guys who made up the majority of the S.A. at that time, might not have behaved as fanatically as the Irish IRA, or Al Queda (at that point), but they certainly didn’t mind beating up or killing men that were in Hitler’s way.  The Nazi show of force was strategic, and certainly helped to eliminate Hitler’s enemies, but excessive destruction would have shifted public opinion against the Nazis in those critical early days.  Since most of the political gains Hitler made were done within the law, a violent upheaval of German society was not necessary and would have been detrimental to his ultimate goals.  While the presentation of Bessel’s article can seem a little confusing, that’s because the role that violence played in Hitler’s rise to power is complicated.   Bessel refers to it as “hooliganism,” and that’s as good a label as any (p. 15).  It is an important contribution to the history of this time period, because it does present all the facets involved.
Bessel, Richard.  “Political Violence and the Nazi Seizure of Power.”  Life in the Third
       Reich. Oxford Univ. Press.  1987.  Pp.  1 – 15.

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