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First published February 1, 2020
"The Luftwaffe aces today are basically caricatures of themselves, and that actually keeps them distant from us, serving neither history nor today’s interested readers and citizens who hope to use their stories to make better decisions for themselves. Second, we would actually get closer to the aces as men—humanizing them, creating a deeper connection to their time and their trials. Today’s readers and commentators are interested in knowing the whole person (consider the rise of the anti-hero—we like fully developed characters, no longer just shiny ones). Ironically, this might allow figures like Erich Hartmann to attain more permanence and more relevance than they have ever had while shepherded so protectively."What this book is, is a look at Hartmann through the prism of Nicholas Stargardt's The German War: A Nation Under Arms; an acceptance that Hartmann's environment had effect on him and an argument that this makes him actually more interesting; and that the early biographies were unsatisfying, one dimensional products of Cold War polarization.
"Let’s be clear: Erich Hartmann was unambiguously a victim of Soviet punishment, lawlessness, and bureaucratic machinations. Likewise, the millions of German mothers, sons and daughters, and others were unambiguously victims of bombings, terror acts, and coercive violence over which they had no control. No serious observer would think otherwise. But using these realities to buttress a victim narrative that seeks to wipe away the realities of German aggression does us no good. It might have been at least palliative in 1950; it’s transparently inadequate today."The final part of the book looks at the literary legacy and it's airbrushed view of Hartmann as a defender against the Soviet hordes. As you might guess from the quote above, it's a thought provoking read for anyone brought up on the myth of the 'Good German' (you might also like to try the aforementioned book by Starsgardt to see this applied to the German population of the time as a whole) and doesn't really paint a picture of Hartmann 'the man':
"Once you get past the initial posturing of these books (remember that cover designs and even titles can be influenced by a publisher as much as the writer), they usually deliver the tried-and-true anecdotes and revert to the same central messages: that these elite Luftwaffe men were misunderstood knights, that we should appreciate their tactical accomplishments independent of ideology, motivation, or impact, and that we shouldn’t bother investigating the flyers’ National Socialist connections because there usually were none and it didn’t matter anyway. Better to assume nobler values, even though many of these values were literally what the Germans were fighting against—recall Hitler and the Third Reich’s intolerance of individualism, democracy, and so on, as well as his effectiveness in shaping schools and institutions to abolish these things. This should be profoundly interesting to us, but no; after reading dozens of similar interviews with Luftwaffe pilots, you start to crave one that gets anywhere near issues like this."Sadly, given the passage of time, we're unlikely to see a rounded bio along these lines, which is a shame.
"As Smelser and Davies conclude:And
One wants to take nothing away from Hartmann in terms of his skill and daring as a fighter pilot. However, to divorce his exploits from the regime, which he loyally served and from whose leader he accepted its second highest decoration, renders no service. Nor does placing him not in the historical context of a war of racial conquest and annihilation, but rather in a romanticized feudal joust between knights."
"The more we treat our historical characters as if their lives were black and white, the more we expect our own lives to be black and white. This harms us. It harms us as citizens, as leaders, as professionals, and as commentators. It provides little value for navigating an increasingly complex world. But when, on the other hand, we treat our historical characters as if they were complicated, worthy of care, and occasionally messy, we can see our own lives in the same way."Not sure I can recommend it, given it's scope for popularization and misinterpretation, but I enjoyed it as a short, thought provoking read.