Reading history can resemble that moment in a horror movie when a knife-wielding maniac stands behind the door our hero is about to open. We know it. He doesn’t. He’s a fool for doing something we would be smart enough never to do. At the same time, he is our surrogate and we don’t want to be eviscerated. Ours is the self-congratulatory arrogance of the safely retrospective. Take this:
“Whoever
thinks back to the inflation years conjures up the memory of a wild, hellish
carnival: plundering and riots, demonstrations and clashes, graft and illicit
trade, agonizing hunger and wasteful gluttony, rapid impoverishment and sudden
wealth, a debauched craze for dancing, the awful suffering of children, strip
teases, currency scams, the hoarding of goods, a frenzy of pleasure . . .”
Those are
the opening words of Hans Ostwald’s A Moral History of the Inflation: Germany During the Weimar Republic (1931),
translated from the German this year by my Canadian friend Andrew Rickard for
his Obolus Press. When Andrew first told me about the book, I mistook it for an economic
history, the dreary sort of volume I would probably never read. Ostwald’s book
is more difficult to describe, more journalistic and anecdotal than academic. It
feels stitched together from many sources, including interviews and first-hand
observation. The structure is episodic. Andrew wrote to me in March, before I’d
even seen a copy of the book:
“When I
started on Ostwald’s moral history I believed I was doing something really
worthwhile. Now I think I’ve just translated a haphazard collection of
anecdotes. Ah well, you'll find a few snippets from Alfred Polgar’s Hinterland inside. There are also some
pictures of bare-breasted women. The rest may serve as a powerful sleeping aid.”
Andrew is
being unfairly hard on himself and on Ostwald (1873-1940). I couldn’t help reading
the volume through a twenty-first-century lens. The much-romanticized Weimar
Republic existed from 1918 to 1933 (annus
horribilis – the first of many), bracketed by the end of World War I and Hitler coming
to power. By war’s end, twenty million, military and civilian, were dead. That
number includes more than two million German soldiers and more than half a
million German civilians. It was a time of hyperinflation and political
extremes, with Communists and nascent Nazis vying for dominance. Hitler was an
opportunist of genius, exploiting the Germans' humiliation for their defeat in the war,
economic distress and, of course, anti-Semitism. His imminence shadows the
entire book, published as it was two years before he became chancellor. A nagging voice in the reader's mind keeps asking: Can't you see, Herr Ostwald and the rest of you fellow Germans, what is about to happen?
Some of the
scenes Ostwald recounts might be lifted from a contemporary American newspaper
or magazine. Here, he sits in a night club near the Zoologischer Garten subway station. First he speaks with a young
Russian émigré (an acquaintance of Nabokov?), who buys some opium-laced
cigarettes. Ostwald writes:
“A young man
who already seemed to be acquainted with the cocaine dealer came over from the
next table. He was wearing makeup, and was nervous and fidgety in his
movements. He winked and held out a banknote to the dealer who, without a word,
reached into his pocket and gave him a little packet of white stuff.”
Ostwald
watches as the young man places a pocket mirror on the next table: “He snorted
up some of the white powder, and then sat looking contented and calm.”
In a chapter
titled “Psychics, Occultism, and Magic,” Ostwald describes a decadent, post-religious culture that recalls a well-known observation attributed, doubtfully, to G.K. Chesterton:
“When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in
nothing, they then become capable of believing in anything.” Ostwald writes:
“It was not
only silly, lovelorn girls and lonely mothers who found their way to these
clairvoyants; many serious businessmen, white collar workers, and senior civil
servants consulted them as well. In the case of one famous man who lived on Bülowstraße
in Berlin, visitors would sometimes have to queue up on the front steps—just as
if they were waiting for butter rations.”
Admittedly, the literary
worth of A Moral History of the Inflation
is modest. It’s best read as a documentary account of an era with uncanny
resemblances to our own. Andrew wrote to me:
“Still, for
a potboiler it has its moments. I'm quite fond of the bit about city escapees
and riverbank camping that starts on page 219, but perhaps that's because it
reminds me of my own summer in Germany (and because I have a weakness for
schmaltzy stuff like Guter Mond, du gehst
so stille, [“Good moon, you walk so silently” – a children’s song] sung by
the Comedian Harmonists). Well, as clunky as it may be, I hope it’s a useful
primary source.”
The scene
recounted on page 219 is prefaced by Ostwald:
"There was
also a fashion for canoes and kayaks, for strange little row boats and folding boats,
and a number of touching friendships and communities developed around boating.
The girlfriend who was a model, artisan, or secretary and who never so much as
touched a dirty dish during the week used to play at being a good housewife on
Sunday. She would help scrub the deck, cook, and do the washing up, thrilled to
participate in domestic tasks that were usually regarded with disdain. The
weekend had arrived.
“In the past
they called them amorous excursions.”
Ostwald is redeemed, on occasion, by a sense of humor, so unexpected in a German.
Missed an anniversary last month. The 75th anniversary of Holbrook Jackson's death was on June 16 (he died in 1948, at 74). Every book lover should find a copy of his legendary book about books and reading, "The Anatomy of Bibliomania" (1930). 668 pages of wonderful reading. I keep hoping some reprint house might get it back in print one day.
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