
Morality and Language of National Socialism
Author(s) -
Андреас Буллер
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ètičeskaâ myslʹ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2074-4897
pISSN - 2074-4870
DOI - 10.21146/2074-4870-2020-20-2-80-99
Subject(s) - morality , nazism , socialism , sociology , ideology , political science , law , communism , politics
This article presents an analysis of the diaries of the well-known German philologist of Jewish origin Victor Klemperer, who kept them in the Third Reich. From the perspective of these diaries, the author of the article examines the three central problems of the totalitarian language: the problem of its genesis and dissemination, the problem of the relationship of language with the ideology and morality of Nazi society, and, finally, the problem of personal responsibility, especially the responsibility of public persons for the public language. Klemperer asks himself a question that we must ask ourselves as well: how can the language of a minor extremist (racist, religious, revolutionary) minority become the language of the majority? Furthermore, under what conditions does this linguistic change happen? Under what conditions does the totalitarian language emerge and spread? The danger of the totalitarian language is that it creates a seemingly legitimate basis to exclude a particular group or even specific groups from the society, thereby turning certain people into outsiders. The totalitarian language allows people to draw, mark and select. But behind this linguistic selection there is always a certain morality that implies concrete moral convictions and ethical ideas. And so it was with the morality of National Socialism. The National Socialist morality was characterized by the spirit of racism and anti-Semitism, which manifested itself primarily in the language of National Socialism. For this reason, we need to study the National Socialist language. But it also presupposes the study of National Socialist morality. This morality appears from time to time in the modern German language, esp. in the language of modern German extremists and racists. It poses a great danger to our society. In this respect, the study of the language of extremism can help us a lot, not only in order to recognize the close relationship between language and morality, but also possibly to avoid social catastrophes.