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Ecology in the 20th Century - A History
By Anna Bramwell
Reviewed by Daniel Hindes on 2004-02-14.
By its title, this book, published 1989, purports
to be a history of Ecology in the 20th
Century. It is actually a rather critical look at
the various ideas behind a relationship to nature
that our author has collectively termed "ecologist",
and their political implications. As stated in the
Preface "I argue that today's Greens, in Britain,
Europe and North America, have emerged from a politically
radicalised ecologism, based on the shift from mechanistic
to vitalist thought in the late nineteenth century."
(p. xi) It is really a book about the ideas that
motivate certain political parties. "Ecology is
now a political category, like socialism or conservativism"
(p.39) she states at the start of chapter three.
The thesis as explained in the Introduction (p.3)
is that "ecologism" - a term our Bramwell employs
to describe an awareness of the human impact on
the ecology of the planet and the concomitant plans
to ameliorate this impact - is independent of actual
damage to the environment. Further, she maintains
that it borrowed different political labels from
time to time, and was unique to the educated Western
classes. Finally, it required a "shift in mentality"
with regard to the biological and physical sciences
in order to come into being. Ecologism, we are told,
consists of two distinct strands, one derived from
Haeckel's anti-mechanistic approach to biology (which
seems not to understand Haeckel very well), the
other from energy economics (the economics of the
problem of non-renewable resources).
Already we have our first problem of logic on page
4: We are told that the two strands arose in the
late 19th Century, then two sentences
later we hear that the second strand was a product
of the energy crisis of the 1970's. This lack of
clarity on a basic level is present throughout the
text. The thesis is introduced as "fall[ing] into
three parts" actually maps out to five points in
the same paragraph (p.3). On page 5 we are told,
"German ecologism well predated National Socialism.
It formed part of a generic cultural phenomenon
that was in part diverted into the Third Reich as
an underlying theme. It re-emerged, well after the
Second World War, in more obviously left-oriented
groups." On page 196 she argues the opposite: that
the ecological ideas legislated by the Third Reich
were integral to it and further would not have found
expression under any other government.
The book as a whole shows a quite comprehensive
background in the sources that frame the argument.
But the style is an odd mixture of the colorful
prose of an editorial writer and the studied obfuscation
of an academic. For example:
"The ecology movement represents
a new political consciousness and direction. It
as been struggling to see the light of day since
the third quarter of the nineteenth century. Like
all half-smothered things, it wailed sometimes for
mother, sometimes for food, sometimes for companionship.
Or, to put it less picturesquely, ecological ideas
borrowed different political labels from time to
time." (p. 3)
"The political picture was complicated
by the remnants of the nineteenth-century, intellectual
middle-class love affair with Germany. For many
of these inter-war ecologists contact and cross-fertilization
with German alternative ideas continued in the 1920's,
and for some into the 1930's." (p.161)
Her style has a tendency to hide the central argument
while appearing simultaneously bold and erudite.
And she remains little able to mask her suspicion
and even contempt for thinkers whose ideals encompass
the biology of the planet as well as its sociology.
What her own political leanings are she does not
say. Reading between the lines, it appears that
she is a typical right-of-center laizze-faire American
conservative with libertarian leanings. That one
can deduce this so readily from a book on history
is evidence of the extent to which her bias colors
her exposition.
Chapter (Ten
The Steiner Connection) is most relevant to this
site. Why Steiner merits an entire chapter, even
if it is only 13 pages, is not clear. The chapter
is divided into two sections: Methodology
and 'The Era of the Peasant.' The first section
attempts to explain the basis for understanding
the question: "How relevant were ecological ideas
to the Third Reich?" First it is acknowledged that
"it is difficult to judge precisely how Nazism was
perceived at different times by its various supporters."
(p.195) Having paid homage to the complexity of the whole issue, Bramwell boldly
declares that it is possible to deduce an ideology,
determine it's intellectual forefathers and identify
traditions.
"Historians of ideas would be
silenced indeed if, for every allegation that the
Third Reich was for example influenced by, or a
product of, the French Enlightenment, or perversions
therefrom, evidence had to be produced to show that
Rosenberg or Hess had studied Diderot, Voltaire
or Condorcet. Ideas are held to permeate or saturate
other ideas. They are, in the telling phrase, 'in
the air.'" (p.195)
By this logic, any historian of ideas can rightly
determine any idea in either a pure or perverted
form was an influence on the Third Reich. Such a
historian of ideas is perfectly within his or her
right to do so. What is harder is to claim that
said idea necessitated, or even was a causative
factor in the Third Reich. Bramwell does not quite
go this far, but many left-leaning crusaders against
eco-fascism do.
Evidence of ecological ideas among Nazi's, we are
told, is not to be found among the well-known or
authorized texts of fascism; it is found only in
the ministerial planning and personal archives of
the Third Reich, specifically in the Ministry of
Agriculture (p.195).
Bramwell identifies the problems in answering the
question "How relevant were ecological ideas to
the Third Reich?" as:
- Determining whether a concept or policy existed
contemporaneously outside Germany.
- Determining whether a concept might be specifically
German but not necessarily specifically Nazi.
- Determining how peripheral these ideas are to
National Socialism.
The criteria for the third point is defined as:
"If [ecological ideas] were part of a separate current
of ideas, then their practitioners would have held
ecological beliefs whether or not the Third Reich
had come to power" (p. 196) - called the argument
for continuity.
Thus Bramwell has stated the problem of methodology.
In light of this how does she proceed?
"The argument for continuity has
to answer the problem that there was top-level Nazi
support for ecological ideas - especially if one
incorporates the attitude of Hitler and Himmler
on vegetarianism and animal rights, issues which
are not covered in this book." (p. 196)
Despite having given a reasonable criterion for
determining whether ideas were peripheral or central
to National Socialism (one that is fully in line
with the latest scholarship on the subject), namely
whether their practitioners would have held ecological
beliefs whether or not the Third Reich had come
to power, Bramwell determines that these ideas were
central to National Socialism because they had the
top-level support of Hitler, Himmler and Hess. This
has two problems. First, she mixes up personal preference
with public policy, and second she has sidestepped
the issue of continuity, whether Hitler, Himmler
and Hess would have been vegetarians regardless
of their rise to power. That these three and many
others might very likely have held their ecological
beliefs whether or not they came to power in the
Third Reich, thereby fulfilling the criterion for
continuity of ideas and a peripheral role in National
Socialism, is a problem she has not even addressed.
She has set up a rather sensible criterion, and
then skipped over the fact that her conclusion contradicts
the results of her test.
The next paragraph states that it would be politically
damaging for the German Green Party (of 1989) were
it to be widely viewed as embodying a central element
of National Socialism. This is doubtless true, it
has not been demonstrated that ecologism was a central
element of National Socialism. It has only been
alleged, based on the fact that certain aspects
of it "had top level support." The course of Bramwell's
argument now shifts from ideas to politics, with
the question of whether the Third Reich was necessary
for ecological political activists to gain power.
With a quick reference to Roosevelt's New Deal it
is decided that indeed, under no other government
than the Third Reich would these political activists
have gained political power. Backtracking a bit,
Bramwell admits "perhaps the ideas would
eventually have affected government policy whatever
the government." (pp. 196-197) This is followed
by a number of questions that go unanswered in the
text, so we must suppose they are rhetorical.
"Another problem is how important
the various ecological legislation and activities
[of the Third Reich] were in terms of the overall
programme. So far, they have been dismissed as trivial
and irrelevant. Was this true, or was this dismissal
because academics did not want to draw comparisons
with today's green ideas?"(p.197)
The question is raised, but Bramwell does not even
begin to attempt to answer it. She is happy to impinge
upon the credibility of a large number of specialists
in the field of modern European history. But apparently
she is not prepared to actually argue the case.
I tend to agree with the many academics that the
ecological aspects of National Socialism were either mostly or entirely peripheral to movement.
Though still in the section titled Methodology,
we shift to a presentation of the factual basis
for supposing ecological support in the Third Reich.
Essentially, it centers on Rudolf
Hess, "Hitler's
Deputy" and "a follower of Rudolf
Steiner and a
homeopath," and Walther Darré,
Peasant Leader and Minister of Agriculture between
1933 and 1942, and the people under them. The "ecologistic"
credentials of these are then detailed. Alwin Siefert
is mentioned at some length:
"He took the then unfashionable
ecological position that monoculture damaged disease
resistance among plants and animals, as well as
diminishing land fertility... He also argued against
land reclamation and drainage, claiming that Germany's
water table depended on her wild countryside. His
arguments were sufficiently persuasive to make Hitler
order that such programmes of moorland drainage
cease. This caused considerable anger among the
Ministry of Agriculture leaders... Siefert was also
a follower of Steiner, and bombarded Walther Darré
with Anthroposophical papers and long letters about
the need to retain wild plants to form a bank of
plant genes and resistance potential... One paper
by Siefert himself argued that... imported artificial
fertilisers, fodder and insecticides were not only
poisonous, but laid an extra burden on agriculture
through transport and import costs." (p. 198)
Talk about being ahead of his time! Each of these
points has subsequently become part of the scientifically
established consensus of most present-day biologists
and ecologists. Now using our earlier criteria,
is it reasonable to imagine that Siefert would have
held these views whether or not he lived under Hitler?
I suggest that he would have even if the Weimar
Republic had lasted another 40 years, or if a communist
government had ruled Germany. By definition of the
argument for continuity, his contribution to National
Socialism is peripheral.
But Bramwell is fundamentally unsympathetic to
those who value ecology. The ellipses in the above
quote hides a number of unsupported negative comments
about Siefert, such as the sentence "The interests
of man, even German man, did not come first for
him." How does she claim to know this? Because he
felt that people would be healthier in a healthier
environment? Her bias shines through. It shows up
again two pages later when she laments the fact
that a 1984 poll found that 90 percent of (West)
Germans had heard of the damage to their forests
by acid rain and 74 percent were "greatly concerned"
- Why? Because "The oak leaf was a symbol for the
SS." (page 200). She has strong opinions of German
environmentalism, but is not brave enough to actually
argue them in her text. Instead she merely insinuates
them.
The chapter now moves into the section titled "The
Era of the Peasant."
"Between the end of the First
World War and the Nazi takeover, the idea that the
peasantry had a special 'mission' was widespread.
A reaction against the use of artificial fertilizers
also occurred. Rudolf Steiner, founder of Anthroposophy,
became its leader, before his death in 1925, and
inspired the founding of a new school of farming
known as 'bio-dynamic agriculture'." (p. 200).
After one sentence on the idea of the special mission
of peasantry, the discussion moves to Rudolf
Steiner's objections to artificial fertilizer. What biodynamic
agriculture has to do with peasants is not clear
to me, nor is it stated anywhere in the chapter.
The two statements are laid side by side for no
apparent reason and left unexplained. Some aspects
of biodynamic agriculture are discussed in a mildly
derisive manner. Then over two pages the attempts
of anthroposophist farmers to farm organically over
the resistance of the Nazi state, culminating in
the death of some of the farmers and their advocates
(a fact not actually detailed in this text), is
described. Described in the Bramwell fashion, that
is. She seems to have forgotten that her thesis
is that "ecologistic" farming was a central aspect
of National Socialism. Detailing how the Nazi state
suppressed biodynamic farmers does not support her
thesis. Yet she seems quite delighted in detailing
how National Socialism
suppressed this ecological farming, but has neglected
to show how, if alternative farming was ultimately
suppressed, including the execution of some of its
adherents, it played a central role in fascism.
Gordon Craig, in his highly acclaimed 800 page book
Germany - 1866-1945 (New York, 1978) devotes
just over a page to agriculture in the Third Reich,
and does not mention alternative techniques at all.
Of Walther Darré he says:
"As [Hjalmar] Schlacht has written,
Darré was more a philosopher than a practical administrator;
he took seriously the rhetoric about the mystique
of the soil that had been the stock-in-trade of
party orators in rural parts before 1933..." (Craig
609)
For most historians, alternative agriculture is
simply not worth mentioning in the larger context
of the important developments in the Third Reich.
As to Hitler's personal "ecologism", I shall quote
Craig again:
"As has been indicated above,
Hitler was no socialist, and, as an admirer of power,
he had not the slightest intention of indulging
those who had romantic notions of breaking up the
great aggregates of economic strength that the country
might return to a simpler past." (Craig 603).
Among the aggregates of economic strength are included
the large industrial farms in Germany. Vegetarianism
as a personal choice is still a long way from being
politically committed to a Utopian ecological paradise.
As the example of Hitler shows, it is not logical
to maintain that a person who chooses one must necessarily
believe in the other. Bramwell, who is so conversant
in the details of the philosophical antecedents
of what she calls "ecologism" (a better label would
be "environmental consciousness") seems to feel
that since, in her
estimation, all life is political, if
a person holds one belief, he or she must automatically
be politically active in a range of philosophically
compatible political initiatives. This thought obviously
falls down with Hitler personally, and I would suggest
it is equally inapplicable to other less notorious
people.
Summing up her answer to the question "How relevant
were ecological ideas to the Third Reich?" Bramwell
writes:
"Still, the existence of ecological
ideologues among the Nazi leadership was perceived
at the time as a system which had room for ecological
ideas. ... Like ecologists to-day, the nazis opposed
capitalism and the consumer-oriented market mechanism.
In theory, if not in practice, they supported critiques
of mercantilism, and claimed to serve ideals of
long-term responsibility, duty and service for the
community." (p. 205)
The case is obviously week. Further, Bramwell can't
avoid a cheap guilt-by-association swipe at present-day
environmentalists.
She presents additional evidence against her case
in the next sentence:
"Nonetheless, ecologists were
eventually seen as hostile to Germany's national
interests by the technocrats among the leadership,
especially Heydrich, who interpreted the search
for ecological values as essentially treacherous:
part of the pre-Third Reich yearning for a pan-Aryan,
non-national identity of a 'soft' oriental kind.
He set the Security Service to harass organic farmers,
as well as fringe groups such as the nudists." (p.
205)
Whether she realizes it or not, she has just presented a convincing
case against considering ecological values to be
a central aspect of National Socialism. She has
even acknowledged organic farmers as a fringe group
in her incongruous combination with nudists. The
remaining three pages explore land use laws in other
countries as compared to Nazis, and the continuity
of ecological thought among right and left wing
politicians after the war in Germany, England and
America.
How do Steiner and his followers emerge from this
chapter? Steiner was a leading advocate against
the use of artificial fertilizers, and among his
followers were some organic farmers. Under the Third
Reich these were initially supported by some at
the Agricultural Ministry, then harassed by the
SS. Since the balance of evidence seems to suggest
that ecological concern was peripheral to National
Socialism, it is hard to suggest that Steiner or
his followers either inspired National Socialism
or were central contributors to it's rise or success.
Yet because of Bramwell's anti-environmental bent,
she seems to feel that this is precisely what she
has demonstrated.
The book concludes with a section titled "The Political
Economy of Ecologism". Here the hostility to environmental
thought oozes out around the academic prose. Ecologism
is a religion. The first purpose of civilization
is survival, and those who value the planet over
people stand directly in the way of the survival
of civilization. They value the planet over other
people. Their politics, in the form of the German
Green Party, are thus dangerous. Bramwell will no
doubt feel that this is an oversimplification of
her prose. However she has argued just these points,
among others, in her book. Stripped naked they do
look ugly.
This book is likely to be a disappointment to a
reader who picks it up looking for a sympathetic
description of the development of environmentalism.
It does contain a number of interesting ideas concerning
the antecedents of environmental thought, though
I suspect that these are not original to Bramwell.
Like many academic books today, it would be greatly
improved if it were more clearly written. Bramwell
can't decide if she wants to write polemic or history,
or if she is addressing an academic audience or
a popular one. She is unlikely to reach, much less
create, a popular audience of those who share her
views on the politics of environmentalism. Academics
will likely be put off by her persistent bias.
A suspicion to the
point of hostility to all things German lies just
beneath the surface of the prose throughout the
book.
Revised February 14th, 2004
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