By James Bowman on 1.19.05 @ 12:06AM
The liberal cullture turned Nazis turned into camp figures more than a generation ago.
Prince Harry, the younger son of the Prince of Wales and the
late Princess Diana and third in line to the British throne dressed
up as a Nazi at a costume party last week. You may have seen
something in the press about it. In Britain the media has been full
of the business for days. Actually, Harry is a bit of a mixed up
kid (he's now 20). The uniform was supposed to be that of a soldier
of Rommel's Afrika Korps, and yet he also wore a swastika armband,
which no such soldier would have done. Also, the theme of the party
was "Colonials and Natives" so the costume was inappropriate in
more ways than one. His historical knowledge seems to be as sketchy
as that of most young people today. But he did accomplish one thing
by donning this costume. The photograph in the Sun that
started the furor showed him not only clad thus but also holding a
drink (vodka and cranberry juice, reportedly) and a cigarette. So
now we know: in spite of the suspicions of some of us, it's still
worse to be a Nazi than a smoker.
But the fuss over Harry's costume was ludicrously overdone. Any
media skeptic will have seen at once how far this was manufactured
outrage. The occasion of such a "gaffe" always appeals to the
journalistic mentality as an opportunity to trot out yet again the
media's ever-ready self-righteousness. No one supposes that Harry
is really a Nazi. Indeed, if he were, donning Nazi regalia is the
last thing he would do. And the claim that the royal family must be
mindful of their status as "symbols of the nation" only reminds us
of what the nation has become. For the Nazis turned into camp
figures a generation ago and more, and those who now claim to be
offended must have gone to sleep about 1965, when Hogan's
Heroes debuted on American television, and have only just
woken up. "I think anybody who tries to pass it off as bad taste
must be made aware that this can encourage others to think that
perhaps that period was not as bad as we teach the young generation
in the free world," said the Israeli ambassador. But whatever "we"
may teach, the dominant popular culture teaches just the
opposite.
Indeed, as more than one commentator pointed out, when Harry
became a fancy-dress Nazi, the musical version of The
Producers was simultaneously in the midst of a smash hit run
in London's West End while Jerry Springer -- The Opera,
which also employs comic Nazis, had a much debated TV appearance on
the BBC. But what was debated in the latter case was the naughty
words. Nobody thought comic Nazis a debatable subject until Prince
Harry tried to become one. Then, his status as a celebrity, and a
royal one at that, invited the press to have a bash at him. Really,
their phony outrage only masked their delight that the Prince was
living up to his reputation as the naughty royal -- formed in the
last year or so when he got drunk and slugged a photographer -- and
so confirmed that he will be providing them with fodder for
headlines, probably, for years to come.
It seems to me that any outrage going ought to be deployed
against the media for trivializing the Holocaust by pretending to
think that such "symbolism" betokened anything real. As Mick Hume
pointed out in the Times, "the farther into history the
Second World War retreats, the more obsessed with Nazis the news
seems to become." This, he thinks, is because the Holocaust "has
become perhaps the last moral absolute in an uncertain world. At a
time when it seems hard to create a consensus about what is right
and wrong on anything from euthanasia to GM food, it is comforting
to remind ourselves of the one issue on which we can agree: that
there remains a clear line between good and evil." He goes on to
decry other familiar uses of Nazi symbolism in the media, such as
comparing any stray bit of authoritarian behavior as "fascist" or
the slaughter of chickens as a "Holocaust." He might also have
mentioned the comparisons in recent weeks between the Asian tsunami
and the Holocaust.
In other words, Nazi comparisons are as much a routine feature
of the hype industry as outrage at Nazi comparisons. The media are
the ones who first thought up the idea of dressing what would
otherwise be seen as the routine if melancholy disasters of nature
in the clothes of such an extraordinary event in human history as
industrialized mass murder. That's how you get people excited
enough to buy your paper or tune in to your TV show. Harry was just
following their example.
The Western world has a long history of titillating itself with
the specter of evil. The devil in the medieval mystery plays was
always a comic figure. But in our own time, the media's readiness
to employ the symbols of evil on every conceivable occasion has
certainly contributed to the inevitable tendency of the popular
culture over the past 40 years to convert the previous generation's
symbols of horror into comedy, from the mock Nazis of the original
film of The Producers (1968) to the mock vampires of
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) to the mock zombies
of Shaun of the Dead (2004). It's just like the media to
have suffered a sudden bout of amnesia about their own massive
contribution to the phenomenon they now further enrich themselves
by deploring.
topics:
Television, Business, Israel