{"id":5582,"date":"2018-12-08T08:56:46","date_gmt":"2018-12-08T16:56:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=5582"},"modified":"2018-12-08T21:35:24","modified_gmt":"2018-12-09T05:35:24","slug":"j-k-rowling-hollywood-and-the-holocaust-the-walrus-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=5582","title":{"rendered":"&#8220;J.K. Rowling, Hollywood, and the Holocaust,&#8221; The Walrus Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>By Nara Monteiro, Nov. 2018 Issue, Toronto<\/p>\n<p><em>In an era where Auschwitz is fading from memory, what do fictional movies about the Nazis owe to fact?<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dropcap\">N<\/span><span class=\"smallcaps\">azis have always<\/span> had a place in Harry Potter. The original series dealt extensively, although indirectly, with the ideologies and violence of Hitler\u2019s regime. The series\u2019 main villains, Voldemort and his Death Eaters, evoke the fascist German dictator and the SS police squad\u2014down to the skull imagery. Those same villains rely on a pure-blood rhetoric similar to Nazi ideologies. What\u2019s more, Voldemort\u2019s power theatrics mirror Hitler\u2019s, and the Death Eaters find similar parallels in the Nazi\u2019s prewar Brownshirts militia. Still, while many of the series\u2019 characters can be loosely compared to real people, they stand far more solidly as fictional representations. Readers can\u2014and likely have\u2014devoured the series without thinking about Nazi Germany at all, even as they learn lessons about power, its abuse, and the nature of oppression.<\/p>\n<p>But as the series expands into Hollywood, the wizarding world\u2019s deliberate nods to real-life atrocities are becoming harder to ignore. In the leadup to the release of J.K. Rowling\u2019s new movie, <em>Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald<\/em>, much of the buzz points to a surprising direction for the movie: a collision between pop-culture fantasy and, with Nazi Germany, real human history. The genre has crossed paths with real life before, of course, but 2018 is the era of post-truth\u2014and the line between fact and fiction is blurrier than ever. Fantastical rewritings of traumatic historical events risk overwhelming fact, and if anyone has the cultural power to rewrite history, it\u2019s J.K. Rowling.<\/p>\n<p>The Boy Who Lived has lived long indeed\u2014twenty-one years after the publication of the first novel, the Potter series has a colossal fandom that continues to interact directly with Rowling, and fans also talk with one another on countless fan websites and podcasts. Rowling\u2019s Harry Potter books have sold 500 million copies worldwide in eighty languages, including <em>Philosopher\u2019s Stone<\/em> editions in Latin and ancient Greek. As of 2018, five of the eight movie adaptations of the original series are on the list of fifty highest-grossing films of all time. Thousands of fans of all ages lined up for midnight book releases in the 2000s. The final instalment of the series, <em>Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows<\/em>, sold 11 million copies in its first twenty-four hours\u2014at the time of its release, that made it the fastest-selling book of all time.<\/p>\n<p>Any new additions into the Harry Potter world that Rowling produces are likely to be a topic of conversation in playgrounds, at high-school parties, over dinner tables around the world, and even in university classrooms. Just two years ago, Rowling produced a play with Jack Thorne and John Tiffany, <em>Harry Potter and the Cursed Child<\/em>, and the script sold at least 4 million copies in its first week of circulation. The original production in London won a record nine Olivier Awards, and its Broadway production in New York won six Tony Awards. The show has since expanded to Melbourne, San Francisco, and, in its first translated production, Hamburg. Then there\u2019s the new film series: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, the first instalment (of five!), hit theatres in November 2016, just four months after Harry Potter and the Cursed Child premiered in London. It passed $800 million (US) worldwide.<\/p>\n<p>Set in 1926, the film follows the story of Newt Scamander (played by Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne), a \u201cmagizoologist\u201d who travels from Britain to New York on business. A clumsy Muggle\u2014or No-Maj, for Rowling\u2019s American wizards\u2014opens Newt\u2019s magical suitcase and inadvertently releases his dangerous magical creatures into the city. In his chase to recapture the creatures before any damage is done, Newt runs into a powerful dark wizard in hiding, Gellert Grindelwald.<\/p>\n<section class=\" in-content1 dynamic-widget widget doubleclick_widget-3 widget_doubleclick_widget\"><\/section>\n<p>The second of the five movies, titled <em>Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald<\/em>, will be released this November. The Fantastic Beasts series is, essentially, a long prequel to Harry Potter. Before Voldemort rose to power in the early 1970s, the Fantastic Beasts\u2019 antagonist, Grindelwald, was the wizarding world\u2019s biggest villain. But if Voldemort\u2019s trajectory sounds strikingly like something out of Nazi Germany, so does Grindelwald\u2019s\u2014perhaps even more so. Grindelwald\u2019s campaign against Muggles and Muggle-born wizards began in the early 1920s and was based on magical \u201cblood purity.\u201d He continued to gain a following in Europe over the next several decades, though largely on the mainland, outside of traditional Potter territory in the UK. Grindelwald committed a series of as-yet-unknown atrocities until his defeat in the legendary 1945 duel with a much younger version of the beloved headmaster from the original seven-book series, Albus Dumbledore\u2014the duel happened the same year the final instalment of Fantastic Beasts will be set in.<\/p>\n<p>There are already parallels between the Fantastic Beasts\u2019 villain, Grindelwald, and Hitler himself. While Voldemort held comparable ideologies and exhibited similar tactics to Hitler\u2019s, Grindelwald seems to almost mirror him. In the original series, Harry learns that Grindelwald built a large prison called Nurmengard, which eerily recalls the real life city of Nuremberg, where large Nazi rallies were held and German Jews and non-\u201cAryans\u201d were stripped of German citizenship. Later, Grindelwald\u2019s slogan, \u201cFor the greater good,\u201d was written over the gates of the prison; \u201cArbeit macht frei\u201d (work makes one free) hangs over Nazi labour and extermination campus, including over the gates of Auschwitz, the most infamous of them all. Grindelwald also appropriated the otherwise neutral symbol of the Deathly Hallows into his own crest, creating a permanent association with hate, the same way that Hitler used the swastika, a peaceful sun symbol from Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain cultures.<\/p>\n<p>In 2005, Rowling told media her Grindelwald tie-in to 1945 was not coincidental. She added that it amuses her to make allusions to \u201cMuggle\u201d events in her stories and that wizarding and real-world wars feed each other. It isn\u2019t uncommon for authors to do what Rowling has done\u2014infuse fantasy into history\u2014but it\u2019s worth asking what responsibility authors have to the truth, especially when it comes to the Holocaust. Fifteen to 20 million people died in Nazi camps and ghettos in Europe, 6 million of them Jews. And there are still about 2 million fewer Jews today than there were before the Holocaust. When an author like Rowling enmeshes genocide with magic, it implicates outside forces. Sure, it may be fiction, but it also strips the cultural burden of fault and guilt from Nazi leaders and places at least some of it into the hands of supernatural forces. Providing magical reasons or motives for historical events removes weight from reality. It also allows Rowling to engage with the Holocaust without meaningfully grappling with anti-Semitism, then or now. Instead, the movie shifts the blame onto something or someone that does not exist\u2014and it does so at a time where many people can no longer tell the difference between fiction and fact.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dropcap\">I<\/span><span class=\"smallcaps\">n february 2018<\/span>, three months after filming wrapped for the upcoming Fantastic Beasts movie, the Jewish Claims Conference and Schoen Consulting conducted a survey on knowledge of the Holocaust in the United States. Researchers called 1,350 Americans to discover what they knew and thought about the Holocaust. As it turns out, Americans are already losing track of the facts, with the younger demographic being particularly clueless. Researchers found that 41 percent of millennials believed that 2 million or fewer Jews were killed during the Holocaust, and 41 percent of American adults didn\u2019t know what Auschwitz was at all. Another 45 percent could not name a single one of the 42,000 concentration camps and ghettos from the Holocaust. Most frighteningly, 68 percent of millennials did not know Hitler was democratically elected; they instead believed he took power by force.<\/p>\n<p>Millennials are forgetting\u2014or perhaps never learning\u2014key information about the Holocaust. What information we do glean is often from popular media. In the same study, 18 percent of all survey respondents said their first exposure to the Holocaust was from books, movies, or television. Respondents were also asked to say how familiar they were with certain historical figures; millennials reported generally higher rates of familiarity with Anne Frank, Oskar Schindler, and Elie Wiesel than all American adults surveyed in the study. All three of them are the subjects of famous books and movies\u2014the recovered diary later published as <em>Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl<\/em>, Steven Spielberg\u2019s <em>Schindler\u2019s List<\/em> (adapted from Thomas Keneally\u2019s novel <em>Schindler\u2019s Ark<\/em>), and Elie Wiesel\u2019s autobiography <em>Night<\/em>. By contrast, fewer millennials were familiar with Heinrich Himmler (commander of the Nazi SS) and Adolf Eichmann (a Nazi of high rank and major organizer of the Holocaust). The only person respondents knew better was Adolf Hitler himself.<\/p>\n<section class=\" in-content2 dynamic-widget widget doubleclick_widget-4 widget_doubleclick_widget\"><\/section>\n<p>In other words, how pop culture depicts Hitler and the Holocaust matters. Storytelling dictates people\u2019s emotional relationships to history, so it can influence how details from these historical events are weighed and remembered. Fictionalizations of the Holocaust and Nazi Germany are abundant, and there are even a number of fantasy films that already exist on the topic. Movies such as <em>The Devil\u2019s Rock<\/em> (2011) and <em>Hellboy<\/em> (2004) have the Nazis opening portals into hell to summon demons to their aid. <em>Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost Ark<\/em> (1981) pits Jones against the Nazis in a race to acquire a powerful supernatural artifact, the Ark of the Covenant. The 2013 movie <em>Frankenstein\u2019s Army<\/em> depicts what turns out to be an army of human-machine hybrid monsters, created by a descendant of Viktor Frankenstein, originally under orders from the Nazis. Attributing supernatural atrocities to the regime is a relatively common movie-making strategy. They all run the risk of making this history surreal, but at the same time, these movies <em>add<\/em> to crimes of the Nazis; they don\u2019t attempt to shift blame or undermine the horror of existing history.<\/p>\n<p>Professor Karen Priestman is a historian at Western University whose research, in part, centres on issues of remembrance and forgetting in Germany. She points out that the aesthetic of Nazi Germany is one of the reasons creators are attracted to the topic. This brings to mind the plethora of films and TV shows that join Star Wars in using Nazi-inspired uniforms, accents, and rally imagery to lend power to their imaginary regimes. But Priestman is careful to distinguish between movies in the <em>context<\/em>of the Holocaust and Nazi Germany and movies <em>about<\/em> those topics. She explains that if a fictionalization of the Holocaust were to lead viewers to do their own research, its impact would more likely be positive. But the reality is that most people won\u2019t follow a night out at the movies with intense research. \u201cAnd what if they watch a movie about the Holocaust and they think, \u2018Okay, now I know something about the actual Holocaust?\u2019\u201d she asks. \u201cIs that a good thing or a bad thing?\u201d It\u2019s unlikely viewers will believe literal magic caused the Nazis to do anything, but what other facts and context will get lost in the retelling?<\/p>\n<p>Fantasy movies, including the ones in the Fantastic Beasts series, tend to present themselves as removed from reality. However, Rowling\u2019s work presents its fantasy world as functioning within a real one. In the seven original novels, she inserted the wizarding world into a Muggle society that we are led to believe is identical to our own. Part of the magic of Harry Potter is that the wizarding world is designed to be a secret world in our regular universe. Fans want to live in the wizarding world; we want to believe it exists alongside our own mundane lives.<\/p>\n<p>That the nonmagical elements of Rowling\u2019s sprawling narrative appear to be congruent with the real world is an essential part of maintaining this happy illusion. But what if that secret world tells us that\u2014surprise!\u2014our own humanity is not really to blame for one of the most disastrous wars of our time? It was not an insidious, deliberate spread of hate, but magic that orchestrated the war. Remember, 45 percent of all respondents in the Schoen survey couldn\u2019t name a single concentration camp. How much rewriting of history would it take to have a legion of fans think Nuremberg was a fictional prison built by Gellert Grindelwald?<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dropcap\">I<\/span><span class=\"smallcaps\">n january 2017<\/span>, after blatant lies about the size of the crowd at Donald Trump\u2019s presidential inauguration, the American public\u2014and the world\u2014watched a White House representative say the words <em>alternative facts<\/em> on live television. By September 12, 2018, the president himself had publicly made over 5,000 false claims, according to the Washington Post. White nationalists are marching openly across America, and Holocaust deniers are running for office. Patrick Little, a white supremacist and anti-Semite who ran for Senate in California this year and has \u201cUS Presidency 2020\u201d splashed across his website, praised Hitler, claims the Holocaust never happened, and wants to \u201cexpel the Jews by \u201922.\u201d Arthur Jones, who ran for Congress in this month\u2019s midterm election in Illinois, has an entire page on his campaign website dedicated to denying the Holocaust (he lost but pulled in a quarter of the vote). John Fitzgerald, who ran for Congress in California, \u201coffer[ed] $10,000 to anybody who can prove that the official Holocaust narrative is true\u201d and recently said on a radio show, \u201cMy entire campaign, for the most part, is about exposing this lie.\u201d (He also lost but also pulled in roughly a quarter of the vote.) It\u2019s a tense time to be putting out fiction that reimagines the history of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.<\/p>\n<p>The question of what art and popular culture owes to reality has never been simple. Somewhere, there is a line between artistic freedom and respecting victims. But art does not exist in a vacuum, and popular culture even less so. Priestman mentions that fiction can contribute to denial and that denial is deeply damaging to the public memory of the event. Even when an adaptation is done well, Priestman says, \u201cYou\u2019re never going to get an accurate depiction of the Holocaust. It\u2019s just not possible, because it\u2019s not in our vocabulary. It\u2019s just not in our capacity.\u201d Perhaps the film that came closest to reaching that capacity is <em>Shoah<\/em>, a critically acclaimed documentary about the Holocaust. It took over ten years to make and runs nine hours in its attempt to do the subject justice. But not every Holocaust film can be nine hours.<\/p>\n<p>Still, Priestman also warns against the risks of turning Nazi Germany into an untouchable moment. People have always made art about human history, including about other recent atrocities; the genocides in Cambodia and Rwanda in the last half century have both sparked their own fictional adaptations. Rejecting fictionalizations about any traumatic time period could arguably remove it from the public consciousness. We may learn the timelines and the numbers in school, but the stories\u2014Anne Frank, Oskar Schindler, Elie Wiesel\u2014remain with us long after whatever test we were studying for. There is no doubt that stories matter.<\/p>\n<p>What Priestman describes is the double-edged sword of fictionalization: on the one hand, not depicting Nazi Germany and Holocaust could be damaging to the memory of what many consider the most traumatic event in Western history. On the other, irresponsible fictionalizations muddy the true historical events and feed the fire of denial. Priestman recognizes that fictionalizations should be about respect and influence. As a historian, what she wants to see in any fictional movie depicting the Holocaust, or other mass trauma, is that, while every single detail may not be correct, the spirit, sentiment, and themes of the film are correct. In other words, there are ways to do this wrong, and there are ways to do this right.<\/p>\n<p>For a way to do it right, we might turn to Guillermo del Toro\u2019s <em>Pan\u2019s Labyrinth<\/em> (2006). It\u2019s a rare example of a film in the fantasy genre that engages directly with real, traumatic historical events. The film is set in the countryside of Spain in 1944, a few years after its bloody civil war. Fascist dictator Francisco Franco is in power. The leading villain, Captain Vidal, serves as a stand-in for the regime, in command over an outpost in the wilderness still fighting the remnants of guerrilla resistance. Deep in the woods, at first oblivious to his tactical machinations, his young step-daughter meets a mystical faun and engages in a complex set of tasks that will supposedly return her to her rightful place as princess of the underworld.<\/p>\n<p>As with any good work of fiction, there are several interpretations of the story, but the fantasy narrative can be seen as an escape mechanism for a young girl who can no longer bear the horrors of her daily life. The film never shies away from the brutality of the regime\u2014at times, it even swings into a lack of nuance, with Vidal more caricature than character. But it represents the perspective of the child. The young girl resists mentally, through her imagination, as the guerrillas resist physically, their paths mirroring each other. As the violence reaches a fever pitch, her magical tasks become more and more ghastly\u2014reality seeping into fantasy. And there is no happy ending: an informed viewer would know that Spain was gearing up for thirty-one more years of dictatorship. But <em>Pan\u2019s Labyrinth<\/em>depicts resistance and self-determination. The magical narrative supports and comments on the depictions of historical reality. Fantasy feeds fact.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dropcap\">P<\/span><span class=\"smallcaps\">erhaps j.k. rowling<\/span> has no obligation to care about any of this. Maybe she thinks it has been long enough since the Holocaust. But viewers and readers must demand more of artistic creators. It\u2019s true that Rowling may yet join creators like del Toro and make an effort to do right by history. Some distance from the actual atrocities committed by Nazi Germany could turn this upcoming Fantastic Beasts film into a powerful narrative that parallels and comments on the worst of humanity, urging us to do better. In a 2007 interview at Carnegie Hall, Rowling was asked about the connection between Death Eaters and Nazi ideology, and she told fans, \u201cI wanted Harry to leave our world and find exactly the same problems in the wizarding world.\u201d She added that \u201cthe Potter books in general are a prolonged argument for tolerance, a prolonged plea for an end to bigotry.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s a hopeful answer. But as fans gear up to watch her next movie, we must remember that fantasy and pop culture can no longer be given a pass as trivial or unimportant. Popular art can generate deep and meaningful analysis of reality, but it can also distort it. Rewriting history is no joke when neo-Nazis are running for office. The truth is slippery in 2018\u2014and we must be critical of how creators respect it, even in fiction.<\/p>\n<p>I am a devoted fan of Rowling\u2019s work, and I\u2019ll be lined up and in costume on the November premiere date to watch <em>Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald<\/em>. But, for the first time, there will be apprehension encroaching on my giddiness. The Potter series has long provided important messages for young people. <em>The Daily Prophet<\/em> and Rita Skeeter have armed a generation for an era of fake news, Umbridge and Fudge prepared us to fight authoritarian and power-hungry leaders, and, ultimately, all seven books are a manifesto of acceptance and love. As another element of the beloved saga unfolds, we can only hope that Rowling will rise to the standards she long ago set for herself.<\/p>\n<p><em>Nara Monteiro is a Brazilian-Canadian writer studying literature at Western University. She co-founded and edits for ICONOCLAST Collective. She was a former intern at The Walrus.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/thewalrus.ca\/j-k-rowling-hollywood-and-the-holocaust\/\">The Walrus<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Nara Monteiro, Nov. 2018 Issue, Toronto In an era where Auschwitz is fading from memory, what do fictional movies about the Nazis owe to fact? Nazis have always had a place in Harry Potter. The original series dealt extensively, although indirectly, with the ideologies and violence of Hitler\u2019s regime. The series\u2019 main villains, Voldemort [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1001004,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[53],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5582"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1001004"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=5582"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5582\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5586,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5582\/revisions\/5586"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=5582"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=5582"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=5582"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}