September 12, 2007
THE PERSISTENCE OF PAGANISM:
Karl May and the origins of a German obsession (Michael Kimmelman, September 12, 2007, NY Times)
At powwows — there are dozens every year — thousands of Germans with an American Indian fetish drink firewater, wear turquoise jewelry and run around Baden-Württemberg or Schleswig-Holstein dressed as Comanches and Apaches. There are clubs, magazines, trading cards, school curriculums, stupendously popular German-made Wild West films and outdoor theaters, including one high in the sandstone cliffs above the tiny medieval fortress town of Rathen, in Saxony, where cowboys fight Indians on horseback. A fake Wild West village, Eldorado, recently shot up on the outskirts of Templin, the city where Angela Merkel, the chancellor, grew up.The cause of this infatuation is a writer named Karl May (1842-1912), virtually unknown in the United States but the most popular author in German history.
A con man and Walter Mitty-like homebody who spent eight years in jail dreaming of Wild West adventures, May (the name is pronounced My) wrote dozens of tall-tale books that have sold more than 100 million copies, maybe twice that many if you count translations from the German. Kaiser Wilhelm II, like May a fantasist who loved to dress up in exotic costumes, adored May's books. So did Einstein and Albert Schweitzer, Kafka and Fritz Lang. Hitler did too.
May's hero was Winnetou, a fictional Apache chief, a household name here. To Germans Winnetou is like Paul Bunyan, Abe Lincoln and Elvis rolled into one. During the World Cup last year, an occasion for the Germans to debate, as they often do, the pitfalls of reviving their nationalist spirit, Der Spiegel, the leading newsmagazine, published an article titled "The Land of Winnetou."
"There are the German poets and thinkers, the German forest, the German 'comfortableness,' German efficiency, the German longing for Italy, and there is Winnetou," it pronounced. "Winnetou is the quintessential German national hero, a paragon of virtue, a nature freak, a romantic, a pacifist at heart, but in a world at war he is the best warrior, alert, strong, sure."
Americans have, of course, pummeled both sets of savages, the Indians and the Krauts, with some regularity.
Buffalo Wilhelm?
Posted by: jdkelly at September 12, 2007 4:53 PMSherman Alexie has a term for such people: "romantic bastards".
Posted by: ghostcat at September 12, 2007 6:18 PMSpeaking of German obsessions and Indian fighting and such, this essay on why the Shoah still gets so much press is more related to the subject than you might at first suppose.
Posted by: Patrick at September 13, 2007 10:47 AMThere were Boxerists in 9 A.D.
Posted by: Lou Gots at September 15, 2007 1:15 PM