
Hitler’s Monsters
A Supernatural History of the Third Reich
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Narrated by:
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Grover Gardner
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By:
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Eric Kurlander
The Nazi fascination with the occult is legendary, yet today it is often dismissed as Himmler's personal obsession or wildly overstated for its novelty. Preposterous though it was, however, supernatural thinking was inextricable from the Nazi project. The regime enlisted astrology and the paranormal, paganism, Indo-Aryan mythology, witchcraft, miracle weapons, and the lost kingdom of Atlantis in reimagining German politics and society and recasting German science and religion. In this eye-opening history, Eric Kurlander reveals how the Third Reich's relationship to the supernatural was far from straightforward. Even as popular occultism and superstition were intermittently rooted out, suppressed, and outlawed, the Nazis drew upon a wide variety of occult practices and esoteric sciences to gain power, shape propaganda and policy, and pursue their dreams of racial utopia and empire.
©2017 Eric Kurlander (P)2017 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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An interesting book
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Nazi Uses of the Occult: Extremes of Twisted Faith
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If you could sum up Hitler’s Monsters in three words, what would they be?
Scholarly, balanced, well-researchedWho would you have cast as narrator instead of Grover Gardner?
I wish that the production company had chosen *any* reader who is capable of pronouncing German words correctly. Ignorance of foreign languages is a widespread problem in audiobooks. Since I study German literature, I am always pleased to find audiobooks relating to my interests, but I have rarely, if ever, found a reader who actually knows how to pronounce German words in a way that doesn't make me cringe. If the book is about German subject matter, and uses a large number of German words and names, pick a reader who knows at least the basic rules of German pronunciation!Any additional comments?
Excellent scholarly treatment of the issues surrounding the supernatural and border science in the Third Reich. I am a professor of German literature, and have done some research on occultism, parapsychology, and related phenomena, so I was eager to read this book, and pleased to find it in audiobook format (despite my dissatisfaction with the reader). Kurlander offers a well-researched account of the topic that draws deeply on primary sources, as well as addressing theoretical and historical work on related topics by other leading scholars. I would love to see more audiobooks of scholarly works like this, as opposed to the popular histories that are more common in audio format.Great scholarship, poor reader
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sobering
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Hocus Pocus helped the Nazi’s loose the war!
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This is a good book
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However, scholarly monographs about WWII and especially about the Nazis _do_ often get made into audiobooks because there's an unusual level of popular interest. But it's important to know what you're getting with this book--it's not a popular history, like, say, Shirer's Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. I think Shirer is a magnificent writer, but he doesn't write like an academic (pretty sure the two facts are directly related, tbh!). Kurlander's book is a scholarly work with extensive notes and a long bibliography full of solid sources, and as such it can certainly be dry at times.
That said, I enjoyed it very much--it was one of the most accessible and engaging scholarly monographs I've ever read/listened to (and that's in the high hundreds). But it was also useful for my own dissertation research (about Japanese mysticism, folk movements and nationalism), so I went into it with a specific goal in mind. I can understand being disappointed and bored if you aren't looking to get something specific and useful out of the book.
I do have a few criticisms. The book can be repetitive at times, and I'm pretty sure I heard a sentence or two from an early chapter repeated in a later chapter (and it wasn't a quote). It could have used some aggressive editing.
I also think that it would have benefitted enormously from a deeper look at theosophy and similar movements prior to WWI throughout Europe and America, perhaps starting with folk/rural romanticism and disillusionment with industrialization. It's a big subject, but it's important to emphasize that these ideas didn't suddenly appear in Weimar Germany out of nowhere (and Kurlander definitely knows this and does devote space to it--just not enough, in my opinion).
Finally, I do think that some of the Weimar and Nazi criticisms of the 19th and 20th-century dominance of scientific materialism and rationalism are interesting and legitimate, even though they were being made by some terrible, terrible people and used to justify unspeakable actions. It is a fact that at the time many people (including scientists) thought science would eventually solve every problem of humanity, even those of human nature. That belief in a regimented scientific utopia was responsible for much suffering and death. Nazi ideology occupied a weird space between absolute faith in science, and resentment that science had destroyed the mysterious and spiritual aspects of life (which Kurlander does discuss). That's not a specifically Nazi issue; in fact, it's a jarring incongruity that western society is still attempting to mediate, without much success. In the book, Kurlander comes down pretty hard on the side of scientific materialism, sometimes to the point of sarcasm. I wish he had been more even-handed. (Or maybe I'm doing Kurlander a disservice and he's just personally an ultra-materialist?)
As for the narration, I often buy books simply because they're narrated by Grover Gardner, so I was pleased as punch when I saw his name on this one.
A scholarly look at an oft sensationalized topic
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A Profound Insight Into a Sadly Relevent Topic
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Interesting and well written
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Highly Academic, yet intiguing.
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