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A Postcard from the Volcano
A Postcard from the Volcano
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1. Poisoning of the atmosphere in Germany
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John
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Nov 02, 2017 02:53AM

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I thought this was one of the better aspects of the book, in which Beckett shows that the corrosive atmosphere the engulfed Germany in the 1930s built up slowly following the First World War, as good people were almost helpless to stop it. I would say there was always a noxious background of anti-Semitism, that was available to the Nazis to identify a scapegoat. There was the fact of Prussian pride, an Empire for such a short time and built entirely on military prowess, not able to accept defeat in WWI. And then the hugely punitive nature of the peace treaty - as if there were not similar celebrations for the glory to come in the streets of Paris and London in 1914. Then economic mismanagement, all worsened by the worldwide depression of the 1930s, it sure made it easy to think that people must be conspiring against the German nation.

I do not agree totally for example Russia, and France were more antisemitic than Germany, indeed there was more freedom to the Jews in Germany than in everywhere. The bad luck was that Hitler reached the power. A novel for example describes the poisoning atmosphere of Germany is "Youth without God" by the austrian writer Odon von Horvath. The novel is very close to the detective novel, but it is really good https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Fonch wrote: "John wrote: "I thought this was one of the better aspects of the book, in which Beckett shows that the corrosive atmosphere the engulfed Germany in the 1930s built up slowly following the First Wor..."
I think it is a mistake to think that because anti-Semitism was worse in Russia in the 1920s and before (certainly true) and in France (I am not sure this is true), therefore anti-Semitism wasn't a problem in Germany. Jews in Germany pre-WWII had access to all of the professions, but only by, for the most part, either converting to Protestantism or by being non-religious. The treatment of "obvious" Jews throughout the novel is discriminatory and Max's mother's Jewish identity is a big family secret.
I think it is a mistake to think that because anti-Semitism was worse in Russia in the 1920s and before (certainly true) and in France (I am not sure this is true), therefore anti-Semitism wasn't a problem in Germany. Jews in Germany pre-WWII had access to all of the professions, but only by, for the most part, either converting to Protestantism or by being non-religious. The treatment of "obvious" Jews throughout the novel is discriminatory and Max's mother's Jewish identity is a big family secret.

John the antisemitism did not reduce in Russia with the arrival of comunism the last year of Stalin he did a purge against the Jews, between the vixtims was the Molotov`s wife Politina. And after was the death/murder of the writer Isaak Babel. Russia is a country with fame of antisemitism, and France also had a Drummond, Gobineau, and some members of Action Français, between them Maurras, which were antisemitic, besides there was the Dreyfuss Affair, which divided France in two factions. It was more probable that a Hitler appeared in France, than Germany, which this thing did not mean that we do not condemn the antisemitism in Germany. I could follow speak about the antisemitism i am reading a book that i am employing to write a review of Colum of Fire, which spoke about this question one chapter. The really the Jews are usually pursued in all countries. Germanyit was not more than other country. The problem now we thought that Germany was more antisemitic than the rest for Hitler.