I just finished James Heartfield's Unpatriotic History of the Second World 
War. It's such a large book and covers so much, it's pretty much impossible 
to give a summary review.

I read it just after finishing Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick's Untold 
History which covers similar material in the chapters on WWII. In 
Heartfield's telling the emphasis is on the Brits and their own particular 
sugar coated deceits. Some of the best parts for me were the extensive 
rundown on allied efforts to suppress communist lead undergrounds and 
resistance movements across Europe. There was lots of detail I didn't know. 
I had only bits and pieces of these efforts, partly from Andre Malraux, by 
indirection. De Gaulle picked Malraux to give a long speech to the national 
assembly right after `liberation' to convince representatives to disarm when 
the main factions who were resisting disarmament were communists. The other 
source was Basil Davidson's book Special Operations Europe, which James 
might have suggested on list. Then there was a little more elaboration in 
Untold History.

My one central revelation was that I never quite understood that many 
Europeans expected to gain a revolution from the destruction of the old 
orders, and that was precisely what the US, Britain and the political elites 
of Europe had no intention of allowing. Liberation had a duel meaning for 
the people that involved a lot more than merely the end of Nazis occupation, 
but also a follow through to a liberation from the old class orders that 
ruled before the occupation. That expectation was crushed in the name of 
stability.

The other revelation was just how brutal and bloody the war in Pacific was, 
which was captured by the rather stunning fact there were very few Japanese 
prisoners of war. The US tends to credit the Japanese military mind of 
fighting to the death, when the reality was less psychological. Take no 
prisoners was the understood policy and there were few facilities to hold 
Japanese POWs.

Another stand out were the sections on the intelligentsia, its divisions and 
its gullibility to embrace the anti-fascist mantle without much reflection 
on the larger imperial projects behind the fine words.

I spent sometime thinking about how I perceived the war by the early 1960s. 
I remember two novels The Naked and the Dead (1948) and Catch-22(1961). But 
they didn't impress me much. A little known third novel was John Horne 
Burns, The Galleria (1947) was much better and captured the extraordinary 
cynicism that must have been ubiquitous. I remember I recognized something 
of my stepfather in that work.

A work which is rarely mentioned is Camus, The Plague (1947). From his 
journals, you find he was searching for a metaphorical world to deal with 
resistance in WWII and played around with some ideas from Moby Dick, but 
settled on the medieval threat of plague, its destruction of a quarantined 
city left to its own. Camus wondered in his journals, during the background 
sketches for The Plague, was tragedy still possible? He didn't outright say 
so, but it was apparent he didn't think so. Another work by Alain 
Robbe-Grillet also deals with what I have to assume was the war, this time 
in the weird and paranoid world of, In the Labyrinth (1959).

In general the traditional arts were almost entirely lacking in any 
meaningful way to appropriate the experiences of millions. There was nothing 
like Goya's Disasters of War. You have to change over to film and 
documentary or neorealist movement to get to the war. In a larger critical 
world, I think the documentary or just the document has taken the place of a 
war fiction to reach into the nature of war and its thorough going 
destruction of societies. This breakdown of the arts, leaves history in a 
unique place and underscores the importance of works like Heartfield's, and 
Stone and Kuznick's on similar material.

The general effects of Vietnam had little to do with its best known 
depictions of Apocalyse Now, Platoon, and Full Metal Jacket. What was 
depicted was the breakdown of the military, which was real enough but only 
understood within the military or the chance encounters like I had with 
deserters. And then the society beyond was breaking down in a lot of less 
obvious ways or at least ways that could be ignored, like the simple fact 
the government lost all of its credibility. It was trivialized as the 
Credibility Gap. What couldn't be ignored by anybody who thought much about 
the devolving of the war from meaninglessness to corrosion was the hollowing 
out of nearly all the institutions of society. This breakdown already had 
the preamble of civil rights movements and much their transformation or 
adaptation to the inequalities of the draft. Who served the worst duty? The 
down and out with no other useful skills. Another people's war.

In the post-WWII background were the collections of writings in 
existentialism that were a lingering intellectual residue of the war and its 
aftermath. What of the case of Heidegger? If there were ever examples of das 
man, the they, inauthencity on the grand scale it was the nazis regime. So 
how on earth did Heidegger get sucked into the meaningless, fraudulant, and 
fabricated national identity and its equally fabricated duties to the state 
in place of an existential responsibility to act independent of any 
sanctioned authority? These were questions that perhaps lay outside a 
footnoted history, but they are continuing questions.

Both works left me little except a kind of abstract sadness. I was reminded 
of Gnossiennes (1,2,3)  by Erik Satie, a set of aimless nocturns that move 
in vague circles and ambiguous shadows. Not much of a cenotaph for sixty 
million dead.

There is a kind of strangeness to learn you were born in such a world and 
know that over forty years of your life were dominated by endless minor 
variations that killed many millions more.

CG








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