Klemperer wrote his "LTI: Notizbuch eines Philologen" in 1945 and 1946, mostly from notes he kept in the diaries that later became the wildly successful "Ich will zeugnis ablegen bis zum letzten" (I Will Bear Witness). He carried on his work despite the danger, and with an impressive amount of conscious objectivity. The work is an excellent, if impressionistic, study of the modes of Nazi language and their development in popular speech and culture. I would emphasize the _impressionism_ that colors this work, because Klemperer was only able to study a limited amount of presently accessible material; most of his work is based on the editions of newspapers, leaflets, and books that fell into his hands in Dresden during the war. He was a Jew in the Third Reich, and banned from possessing books written by "Aryan" authors. As well, over the course of the war the restrictions on Jews listening to radios, reading newspapers, and even talking in public became too great for Klemperer to realize any truly comprehensive study.
I do not wish to seem like I am condemning the man with faint praise: Klemperer wrote the first postwar study of Nazi language and linked it directly with the operation of the regime. Subsequent researchers have borne out Klemperer's thesis: the euphemisms and barbarisms in the Nazi tongue exerted a considerable influence on popular culture and personal expression. It is not necessary to go back to the Forties to find this influence - it exists today in modern German. The contemporary quibbles over such words as "ausrotten" or "endlösung" mask the considerable reformation of German that occurred during the Third Reich.
Students of twentieth century history cannot ignore this book. It is a must read.
List price: $14.95 (that's 30% off!)
Klemperer describes the everyday worries in everyday life and that is what makes the book so fascinating and important: nobody can say "they did not know", because Klemperer knew that being sent to Theresienstad or Auschwitz was essentially a death sentence. What is also impressive to follow is that constant fear, tiredness or lack of food slowly numbs a person: when the famine begins, he complains a lot about food shortages and the bad quality of the potatoes, but when this goes on longer, the notes on the subject disappear.
In the beginning of February 1945 the last Jews get a notice to report for transport, but by a miracle they are saved: the same night Dresden is razed to the ground by the (in)famous bombardment, leading to a fascinating first-hand account of the experiences of a civilian in wartime.
Klemperer removes his star and then the 4-month trek by foot, ox-cart, milk bus and train through war-torn Germany starts: from Dresden they travel to an old servant of theirs some 10 kilometers away, then to an old friend in Falkenburg, on to Munich, where they have to travel extensively in the surroundings before they find a place to live. After the capitulation they decide to travel back to Dresden. This whole chapter gives an impressive insight into the life of ordinary Germans in the first half of 1945.
What is also impressive is the love for his wife Eva: he constantly worries about her, tries to protest her and does the little menial jobs in house. When they have to travel back to Dresden through after-war Germany, it is Eva, however, who leads the way and takes the decisions.
All in all a very important diary by a very afraid, but still courageous man.
On reading it, I almost couldn't believe that it was genuine...but no writer of fiction could have created something as extraordinary,(I've used the word again,) as this.
Klemperer was a Jew, who managed to survive the war living within Nazi Germany because he was married to a Christian woman & 'luckily' for us, he wrote EVERYTHING down. Every. Tiny. Detail.
A superbly intelligent & witty man. Sometimes these kinds of books are just fascinating as eye-witness accounts, but what's unusual about this, is the fact that this man could actually write AND SO well.
SO sad & frustrating that it wasn't published within his lifetime.
I can't say any more. I'll never be able to say enough.
Probably the most extraordinary eye-witness account about life in Nazi Germany available...NO!...that will EVER be available.
Definetely the most extraordinary, (yes, it IS the right word,) book I've personally EVER read.
I'm honoured in being able to recommend this to you.