Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
O. S. S. Confidential
?>m«
•i^-.-.;
and
1«V
:''>
Henry A. Mtirray, M» D^
IlP.rvard Psychological Clinic
'
if
mi "
^'^.
'UZ
m^^mm^"^^^^^^-'^-^^'^^^--
^^^^iMi'"^.-'"-
FOREWORD
Aim
present an
The aiid of this memorandum is (1) to
- 2 -
in the attempt to
MEIN KAMI^.has prpved reieardlng
.
personality.
discover the underlying forces of his
Sales, has also
MY NEW ORDER, edited by Roussy de
been utilized extensively.
HITLER THE
A paper published by W.H.D. Vernon,
Abn. & Soc.
MAN - NOTES FOR, A CASE HISTORY {Jour, of
i»ritten under my
Psychol., 1942, 37, 295-308), was
of the ideas
general auper^/ision and contains most
of professor G, W. Allport
and myself on this topic
in the fall of 1941.
3o far as they were crystallised
in toto as an
This artlcie by Vernon is included
the necessity
introduction, thereby relieving ma of
analysis that follows)
of rests-ting (in the detailed
Section
•-%s;4S'A'-^'v' ;r
'-^:^
icf
st<3,?j;oN 1
containing
- 3 -
' '-"
., S s-"^- ";-- »'
'
. ,
^^•^m^ii • *
- 4 •
fear of consc5.ence;
and ye t - .
dependent
a child he was frail and sickli, e motionall y
,*^r-'V:
; -
- 5^ ^
" \ .••'•.ii:-.--
^: -JTir.-':''---.-:
'
^»>
- 6 -
'
Hitler s appearance,' when he wore a long heard during
hie outceiat Vienna dasrs, waa said to he very Jewish,
and yet -
'
4?-. .
-• 7 -
'
demonstrate 8»ale power before a woman, he is impelled
-•ij&L'"' ' •
-a -^
,3i»:-
^^^^.^^ft^^v^-'- vr?^^m:<^^!-'\^^' 'T^r^''--^: :--rivr^^^^'^-^^:v^
:J^''^:::;!!^^:p^0^
'^i<.-
- 9 ^
actido
father* The boy's relative weakness made this
of revenge
impossible, apd so the drive and passion
iV 4.1'
Hitler exhibited
This would expiflJi the fact that
the age
no ei^rgetic ambitious d rive of his own from
of 13 years (when his, father, tM enemy, died) to the
the conqueror •
%-.$_;
v'^
: s
i 10 -
.
::: Wi
?o»ifr j^
y ,'/* /' ;-„^ ,% .
, ^ .
*c^--^
V '--i^tt^f'
y
- 11^
»
which has no vent in a •weak piping time of peace
(Tinless he "became an outright criminal), and
there-
embfft«i§#
had to be stubbornly repressed ever since he
his career of ruthless dominance and
revenge
on
of
without guilt feelings; but despite his boasts
not been
having transcended Good and Evil this had
,-^-1--"
t'^^
c - 12 •
tendency*
of sexual developments
•^li^
•-'
r/^y:y^/t>is^)^||^.^^'!:5i?^ »
''*>','^y'
^l,y^^.- "':*':« ^''f^:-'^ <'.'tfV <.; viv
:-U:'V^'^^^.
H^^^i^V-
- 14 -
had more
ipg, et6» $M8 )b»ve
S^ '
•
k"^5%r. .,; .^
L 16 -
i»*i.r*?'<K^
^ 17 -
"prlmltitfe.Madei^y'to destroy. .
Hitler has always
Reich). .
and plans
,
- 18 -
t^d^'\.l\^•
- 19 ^
- 20 -
Hitler,
1,. Inaociatioh in Oermany. ^ Since Hitler and
-.v;. <^--^v^!!:^-::^^<^-f^ :i:-5^vt
^>^^T^?:^^^%*V^;'
':,^.Y^J%^^^
1^
•r-.<»-;;iSt-yr.--.
- 21 -
(in his- own mind) for many illegal, acts; and (iv)
III. Sentiments . -
*#-
W^^^^^VW^^^ff^^^^^^^^'^^i^^
>/*?
mr^
- 22 -
tinion.
iL^^x,
r:^|wS"S-;" /
''',-'' ''' •
'
MM':
n^ W j.:^
• 23 -
to rule*
1. (e) Hitler's sentiments have been with
sexuality).
•^'^^.u-f.jK^^irriv^-^
• 24 -
- 25 -
-
S*;) •
/.TWvrv^;.y.:)S^.,r^^Wi^^X^^
"^-^'^i^^ff^fl^^^^^
- 2S
have
end Justifies the meana, that your opponents
^>:>:r-.
- 27 -
insanity is sanity .
the people.
solution
appeal to youth*
provide one.
and meetings^
I^Sfei^:^^
jf^y-^^-;-^,
;5^;,,.;;,..
*''^*ft 'i-
f
. 30 -
1^'
but not very likely.
5, Hitler way arrange to have himself shot by
- 31 -
It ia not
' : 4
heco in the hearts of his countrymen.
unlike ly, that he will choose this course,
which would
vi«w, first
h3 r be very undesirable from bur point of
to all
because his death would serve as an example
death-defying
his followers to fight with fanatical
it would
::-;*; ; energy to the bitter end, and second, because
insure ^tier's immortality - the Siegfried
who led
Slav.
the Aryan hosts against Bolshevism and the
'"•
unconscious. This would not be undesirable frCm pur
o..".^".
were hidden
standpoint, because, even if the fact
deteriorate
from the people, morale would rapidly
the hero would
as rumors spread, and the legend of
i--'^>^''
Hitler became
be severely damaged by the outcome. If
hands of
insane, he should eventually fall into the
• .VrtJ, -
vowed that he would commit suicide if his plans
do
miscarried; but if he chooses this course ho will
,-!,•--
^'v^/,:
'^i^^^^^itm^^^^
.A.J
- 33 -
been swayed
in asking these predictions we have
chief concern
most by the supposition thet Hitler's
consequently
13 the immortality of his legend and
according to
he will endeavor to plan his own end
pattern.
the most heroic/ tragic and dramatic
(dramatic
Optipns #5 (insanity to some extent) and #3
strike us as
suicide), Qt #4 (death at the front),
a trial followed
Of the conventional punishihenta
^
by exile -
""i5»»^Mt' ,' '
by execution, by life imprisonment or
of Hitler's
will provide a trafgio ending for the drama
element
sensational career; and thus contribute the
troatedf
faculties
and paychologiata to examine him and test his
di
j
- 35 -
the world."
crack-brained fanatics who try to dominate
powerful deterrent to
As such it could serve as a
domination.
others with fantasies of world
1. (f ) A thorough study of
Hitler's personal-
importance to psychiatry
ity would be of considerable
documented book
and the publication of a carefully
act as a deterrent
on the subject would not only
future would-be Hitlers,
(publi3ho4 in popular form) to
contribution to science.
"but would ^e a significant
-
2. T^^f»»>^T. Wow and the .Cosaation of HdstJlitJes.
accelercte Hitler»8
The aim should be either (i) to
30 certsiniy effective as
repeated military setbacks.
measures which
Shall limit ourselves to a few
VJQ
from arranging
might serve (2. (a)) ijo detar Hitlep
himself, and (2. (b))
a hero's or a martyr's death for
of his legend
>«
to make him believe thf»t the immortality
hands of the
will not suffer if ho falls into the
United Nations.
- ^6
use of these
By the repeated and not too obvious
two messagea Hitler wduld be faced
by a conflict
might be in-
between (D a self-annihilation which
a peaceful
terpreted as a cowardly betrayal, and (2)
the resurrec-
justified by the necessity of pi?eventing
to rouse
tion of the memory of Hitler aa a superman
revolutionaries.
future generations of criminals aid
- 39 -
of sow© value
-«»40 -
etc., etc.
people.
1. (b) Name fdr Ritler »-» In the minds of
'
of €li6 i&$a.98« lieli W^ ^WHOa fSS F^Kf efeouldi sad
lijiss6iitti«$
J
:. II i:
'
II
.
iw . . ..
I ... 1 . 1
dMMi . i ' . "
'*' i*»^ tJdclln© and ffilX of the
-"y^
fttl»lt*e), and all ootnnrunlcatlona eddl^eaaed to them ahotild v
- 43-
of the Spirit
of' cental af0eiali9ta>>hat haa b^cowo
that a inan
0f iPasOiSBif P^ "!>«» yo^ s^^ii belldve
'*
woridt'V .
;, ,
*
i: (M 6ettiieny*a Oho fomoini nff Ally. Japan^
.\. .. .
- 44 *
University of Wml^h*
coTintry
ThB Allies 9houia b9 prepared to Invade any
^tet haj?bor«> iwor Id criminal,
m.:- •
,-'- 1
• V-.*»!v^^*fv*
"*
T* "^ -^ «
- 48 -
"...
-
'
<
a aoft peace for Germany will be a v ery hard peace
troatrtent
^^djtibly.ths fll-at .foui* stefs ta thd
<»aa b« adapted te the
of; a aiiiflQ, ^ai«6fl0id DorstShaXltr
'
piyahi^ siQ^0as
6©t. foi^g^t thftt tha «0i4i»§« ©I their
/'.•.
(conteietisj;?'
i»l|(|p»t, 6r/^l»fed|^
fiJP ilficen^eloualy) by the ability, knowledge,
s»egiindnt0 that
'• '
. (ti) |il3SlM*^ "^^
6©6tii^y Q**a«ttf ahduid- be ^ifei© fittest thit th^ tJteited
- 49 -
Klfe^'
'
oeoplis iMta beeii won.
'
All thi« will aeiHre a double purpose* It will
w^r*-
- 50 -
.;
(1) Individual. i)6l^n&id.* V6i>y
aa an eq\ial. .
^*
-•^^•^-rr^^r-^^
- 51 -
' * . • • •
- 52 -
- 53 -
until
;w«?ul^ ^Ji to eloae oil schools a nd universities,
ltt]>ort&i3t oeiJdeilU0n<ses«
' ^
:
m'.\;
*
'
m^^^m^^'^-^^WW^^' ^ ^:^'f^'^r;-^yi^rr^^i^-{i,^^^^^
^^^>-..
sm^tm m
^t
w* H*; ©^ .^essftSQ
W-
'^:-
<
FTjr, ,_^ .*v^-^-'^^'''A^:'^^T??^*^"^Vj?<^F25^-*> •. ^ -'.
the maiden name of his mot her- In- law • As Heiden aays,
1 January S, 1877
*
%
- 57 -
wOin&n*.
his own Ji&thes» tmt th« tllf»t t^ lt*e more than two
-.5$
tb^ twojs with hia niothel* aiding with Adolf and finally
m
fm':-^
•
|d«a* «>f aXX «*ft«* t« 1912 h« «««* to' Muni d& ati<i
that theao religiona are but old huska and muit glye
Hltler*a Attll;iJ49
I I
.
n
J
•
toward nfower
I
"
I
I
-
rt [
II I
' ' ' ' " ' ' li
_
ooct .1 r '
gig
I I
I
'ti9et4.
I V i I I I
for
I
.- I
J il l
_
I
fioiw HfiBOa do; ftot display; j^owdr^ "hd bpfi only cortteifflpti®
- 64 -
the great wee period "he hpd great respect (9), T>«t
hitJiaelf (4).
flttler*8
I Vn I
» I III I
andn' towprd
attitude toward the Jew& II
II I ii
n I $ II Ji t , / I
I II
ftQQB#-^
11^1 a"i
AD^;;1^392ilti8iD
'I II I
iB not on tuQcommon thing and
- 66 .
«. 57 -.
attd ila every love affair the bi^eak waa mode, hot by
Hitler, but by the ledy eonoerned (8)». In one cftaa,
im eloquenti underatctemont*'
fO-. ,
.>'^
68 -
*
. Hitlef .• 3 n ee<S to Talk; » This rather obvtoua
59
'
Xti tha fiald of painting there are t*o matters
^-'
70
.
it ia iri ja? ohltacti*i-a that Hitler « a artlatlo •
- n -
:*
>:?•'
.''^ i-
'
/
ibiXity to divide them and stl'lke the« 6q« Tjy q^i
hi* tense of timing so as to atrlkff at the most
n
wky .(is)* M^ tAimat irox>l£ steadily, but; with expXoislve
cmtburaii of ttotiliritjr or not At all (X6; 8). Sven
75 *
of beth. ,
I.'
eeoQion ROloh*
.
_ _ , .
- 91 -
^.
BlBLIOGHAPHy
SECTION HI
K
Iltetailed Analyajs of HI tier 'a PersoJiality
I'
F 5
(Written especially
I'" for psycholo.glsta
and psychiatrists
: *••
'^'iS'
.'j"'-,"^,",
V ;"'•*-' r^ C"'
•• "•' '" ^- - ',- - .- ^ J >'; .- ^Y'f: ^-^^.J^.^,-.-".*;- . -t-^,' ,•*•''
.f
OVA fi,
,'<'>. .-^ ',, .''- .^ <.'f>'j ,'.-
>.^v,,. - •
? r -. •^'/?
- 82 -
and in strength*
- 84 ^
to Christy .
;
-as -
in thia t*aper
neurotlclsm*
also been said that he was not only blind but d\mib,.
a vocal chord.
- 88 -
h
5f the stOinftch.
3d
of an li?on Man* •
.
f
... , ^ -^^;t^r-^-y-!'7r-vr.:
9X «
i88d, Apr* 20 , \,
,
Bi^th of Adolf Hitler in Braunau
*
1889 - X907
I
I. B^mil]r Seletloftg
.
^(J8i0 dr the cenfualofi %Tm% hfefl arisen tn iw^jftrd
tipper Austria,
94
raaaoift al)» wi« aauti' t>ac^t( txi hatf homa ijpt tha ^otrntry*
^ 9© -
tyrant*
,•
if. ^ ,,
• 98 -
Germany*
(h) It is not unlikely that Hitler in writing
'J
^ 97 -
.
his footsteps and become a State official; but the
- 98 -
father-son conflict.
8* Mother
domestic
age, her docile character, her years of
't-
^ 100- -
lunss
>^^'
^*"-
r'^
^^V^XLER'S -mother:!^ .-^iTM
-J'--
'^:""
, .children .wlth^ eternally the same loving
kindness, (M^K* S)
|:
:7J-
. V! :',4-!,;, ! , *: J4 ..^ ^m
^^-;r,N.v-^
"*•
•'
;"\^*v' r> ^.. .^; N .- "'r • ^--^ ^V' ••'•'-'. ^4';i^;«"'
: ' . .
"^i^ >
. lOX ^
:"»,••;'-«-*...
.
tfee -buri^t
sWyea;by'he|''g^y^lon^Jffer th« dther*
^
^e Catholic^cemetery, Adqlf /^
-ha<t,dep8X?tejy.K<,f>j3^*%j •';*. "4^
- 105 -
(c) SlbllDga
- 104 -
r#<
'>,'^.-
- X06 -
Vr .
'
himself sick.
t
. 108 -
likely that the boy was at all popular with his class-
ma tos« During adolescence he was said to be quiet
serious, dreamy and taciturn.
4« Conclusioria
- 109 -
ih
jneant more to him than love.
II" !
(3)- Ado.if Hitlor has hung a portrait, of hia
Interest In women*
O^ere can b* no doubt then that. Hitler greatly
enTled andL admlreil the power and authority of his
- 113 -
I 11 I
II l i I
'
l I I II n I .
I i li -li- i
I
•
I
•
I II f ill
- 114 -
- X15 -
The former came mostly from his father? the latter from
later.
- lis *.
Viennese Jew.
(iv) His father had three wives, one a
out of marriage.
- 117 -
* 118 •
early age and was the factor^ more than any other « which
decided that he would becoiae a supreme success rather
than an utter failxire, it is worth while noting here
intense insociation:
. (i) Influence of Ludwig poetsch, his
A\istrian selfv.
- 119 -'
(vii - 1) f
•the longing grew
stronger to go there (Grermany) where
since my eftrly youth X had been drawiqi
by secret wishes and secret love*
""^^
{U.K. 151).
B, VIENNA DAYS
1908 - 191S
are these:
than draftsman.
Hitlerian projection.
7. Hanisch reports that Hitler's love for
a purity complex.
^ 125 -
V}.-
- 126 -
Vienna. He writes: i
me are these
i
'
- 127 •
his son:
- 130 -
C. WAR EXPERIENCES
1914 - 1919
. our theme
supposedly
medal aftel- he had left the Front,
gassed mone of the last offenalved of the
Allies.
marked
3. Informants have commented on Hitler's
offering to
subaerviehce to the Superior officers,
menial tasks,
'
do their washing and perform other
an extent that
courting their good graces to such
his comrades were disgusted.
company
4. Hitler Ta3 the only man in his
package's from home, *nd
never to receive any nail or
when the others
at Chfistmas and other occasions
he sulked moodily
were receiving gifts and messages
instance of press re-
by himself. Here is another
jection. . .
that in
5. It is hard to explain the fact
prompted above the
four years of service he was not
by one of his officers
rank of corporal. The comment
is the only explana-
that he' was ft neurotic fellow
1 '.
- 153 -
v.^:;
that
waa after haari.ag^'the news of her capitulation-
-•/
I ri*"
^^(:^??5dB:2t^^.:f
% ,
'..
" .
^' ."^
.
p.
- 133 -
D. POST-WAR EISTORY
1919 -
• .135 ^
- 136 -
were these:
(a) wiping the Versailles Treaty off the
books, ,
Allies, and
. 157 -
('
after
that he did not permanently give up meat until
V. PERSONALiry STRUCftJRE
1, Ego
According to the criteria we are acouetomed
to uae In meaaurlng ego strength and structv»re,
'
Hitler's ego Is surprisingly We iik* Here we are
t^
.* X40 .
.. Ul
even
His tantrums have been often described., and
thought it be admitted that Hi tier, has a capacity
such
to turn them on and off as he sees fit, stilly
oblif^ationa
.^^ ^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ „^^^^^ ^^^^
oomes from the Id, and the ego is tiaed In Ita aei?-
2. Id
(Iv)
. Its the subconscious the work
goes' on. It matures, sometimes it dleS.
Unless I haV'e the inner incorruptible con-
viction: this is the solution, I do nothing.
Not even if the whole party tried to drive me
to action. I will not act; I will wait, ho
matter what hfiippsna. But if the voice speaks '
large
wrapped. up In his dream world, is unaware of a
to meet an emergency.
(v) I go my way with the certainty
and security of a soitoambullst.
This
which we call the unity and orienting themas.
monomanla.cal
compound of motivations, which amounts to a
a rigid,
idea* will be fully described later. It is
thalamltJ
fanatical, and indurable reservoir 6f the
threa times
energies which, on release,, have two or
- 146 -
Baker Eddy*
- 147 •
symptomatic of schizophrenia
3. Superego
- 148 -
passages
of an \mqulet conapience:
• •
- 150 -
,
'^psychopathic personality" or "moral imbecile" seems
\ . . .
show* ,^
I ...
/
/ -152^
fe'v
•
- 163 -
greatest projector.
Two or three Illustrations would suffice to make
plain th* nature of Hitler *8 projections, but they
chin*** '
5. idea lego
compound
The Idealego, as we define It, is a
the subject, which
of images, engendered in the mind of
level of aspira-
represent what he would like to be, his
his career, the man
tion, his best self at the height of
that of a great
be the figure of a master criminal or
dependent
benefactor or prophet, its exact nature being
Id, ego, and
upon a host of factors stemming from the
that the ideal-
superego. lii Hitler's case it is clear
and un-
ego is the aominant force of his conscious
in
conscious life. We shall discuss, it presently
drives and
connection with his major configuration of
sentiments*.
•
108
relatively few men who has largely lived out his fantasy.
are the
The main elements of his major configuration
following:
X. f>68itiv9 Cathexis-^ of power
'
(1) Poaitive cathexls of powerful gfoupa
(natlona ). »
- X6X -
b. He said. ..Wagnex*
flanlsch:
was a nghtar^ there was more greatness
and power in Wagner.
c.Over Hitler's desk han^s a
portrait of Frederick the Great, ^^i°l
Hitler
all Germany's historic characters.
has chosen as his hero.
March J 1933
' s
/. , •;'.[LT.::/^.r. :
'^ w>zj>r^;5.;*y: *'+?i7>« *.'^ -z':*;- .it*. <r; .^v. -^\. vj
:
,r^.
'•"^V^?^*^' V •¥. f-'fir'V*"
>li'ijV*"'i- i:r ^ '4 " ; A-^\-- t.'^.^.fM w.'
^il53 -
Ji ..,
•"!
Eeiden: In the midst of the Munich
(ill) •
• 164 -
a
and again break the ridiculous ^fetters of
so-called "humanity" of the Individual, «"
that its place will be taken by the "humanity
of nature, which destroys weakness in
order
to give its place to strength.
the goal
external became internal and was accepted as
notion- of the. powerful
of endeavor. Around this central
based on
individual there has developed an ideology
in nature. The
the so-called aristocratic principle
superman, leader
final conception is that of a super
- 165 -
- 166 ^
ruthleasne ja
nothing but brutal strength and J"
"SrsT^Via la an excellent e^f°Pl« ^f ^"^
the crux
p?ijeition and sums up in a nutshell
of Hitler's personality.
understand Hitler's
One will not be able to
force, its maintenance
personality, its extraordinary
influence on the German
this side insanity, and its
of hia emotional
people witiliut taking full account
he concelvea
identification with an ideal Germany a
a
of the nation:
Power.
•
6, Need for Dominance. Ruthless Will to
powerful,
Hitler's positive oathecatlon of a
described, as
nation and a powerful ruler has been
in which Power
well as his creation of a social ideal
point. His deference,
was to be carried to Its furthe.^t
to face with representa^
even obsequiousness when face
described. What we have
tlves of power has also been
- 169 -
We can say,
of emiAaaia frtnn deference to dominance.
Ideal
jxustlflcatlon that If F^tler»e
I think, with aome
that the nation
aoclal pattern had existed In Germany,
an iron man, he might
had been under the. dictatorship of
place In the eyatem aa a
have been willing to take his
'corporal in the army,
aubordlnate, Juat aa he did aa a
pattern was not in
but the fact that av^ch a aoclal
it. He became
operation atimulated him to Inaugurate
after another,
diaaatlafied with one political leader
degrees forced himself
Kahr, Ludendorff , etc., and by
his scheme somebody
into the rfile that according to
finding no one
must fill. It is as if a masochlst,
to play a i^e auffioiently aadiatic to gratify his
that r^e himself.
eroticism, were to decide to adopt
of the possibility of
we have to take account here
Listening to flitlei^'s
vicarious pleasure in either rSle.
sense of his Idehtlflca-
words, wo often get a certain
adopting the 'submissive
tlbn with the aadist whe^ he is
the masochlst when he
r^e, <^d his identification with
To exj^laih the identifica-
la acting as a brutal tyrant.
assume an elementary heed
tion with the sadist, we must
power,'which gets aatisfied
for domlnanae, or wiU to
this roundabout Way. Anyhow, it Is clear that as
in
a
- 170 -
way more and more to the demon within him. The ambi-
4 in*
of himself.
(iv) Hitler r We aM are. In a small wayj
iltee St* John^ (the Baptist). I wait for Christ
I dldl
I-
X dldl
quoted by Puchs:
Do you not realize that you are in
the presence of the greatest German ever-
\ known to historyl
type by an adherence
he stands out among others of his
trooper or the
to the uniform of a commonplsc^ storm
a fine
to the temptation of dressing himself up in
After
uniform or In imperial robes as did Napoleon.
a
the war, he went about in jack-boots swinglfflg
has
hippopotamus- hide whip and a plastic surgeon
and he has
removed superfluous fat from his nose,
- 175 - '
: D
measures.
lamp post.
Spreti collapsed r^
i
J>
r - i77 -
12 • Orienting 'l?heina
foot.
^185-
mention:-
section i /^
- 185 -
retreat kt Berchtesgadent
- 186 -
others.
- 189 -
- 190 ^
and frustrators.
periences.
- 191 -
accomplishments of self.
(i) Although, as I shall attempt to prove.
Hitler's character structure is a reaction
..formation to tendencies of which he is highly
contemptuous, both these tendencies and the
contempt. are largely unconscious to him. Much
more conspicuous in his conscious psychology
are his superiority feelings, his self-esteem,
his outf lying self-confidence.
(iii)
'.
Hitler: I devoted myself en-
thusiastically to my passion for architectvire. •
I was able to read or draw late into the night.
I was never tired. Thus my belief that my
beautiful- dream of the future would become
reality, perhaps only after many years, was
strengthened.. I was firmly convinced .that
some day I would make a name as an architect.
(M.K. 45). ./
(n Rec).
did the
treason, then countless others
I deny all guilt so long as I do
same.
company those
not find added to our little
gentlemen who helped... (M3.0. auj.
Proclaiming worth of criticized
(ii)
or of self
part of self,, or another pa?t,
as' a whole (A Rec) to assert the merit of
:
a Refect
what others condemn; to balance
with an asset; to wipe o^^v^i^fl^i^^J^n
-^r in
recalling one's successes in this
some other, field.
Hitler:- I believe that as a
the eyes
Nationalist Socialist I appear in a wild
of manv bourgeois democrats as only
SL! Lt :l^ .»1W man I still
better European, .{j-^'^^S^:
.. (M.N. 0. 4U4;..
self to be a
- 193 ^
- 195 -
analyzed
•
same conclusion.
hate
(ii) RauchniRg: In the harshn;)ss and
is something
unexampled cynicism of Hitler there
a hypersensitiveness.
more than the repressed effect of
- 195 -
feeling.
deserve mention:
has already been given, (Sec. IV), and more will follow*
adequacy.
6. '
ideal.
. 198 -
,
five subsequent years when he had his mother pretty
.
v;ould eventually suQceed as ruler,
/ (iv) Humiliation of self in Vienna as
a woman in man#
ship • .
:
^
- 201 -
- 203 -
masochism ^
Hitler, quoted by Rauschning: The
(i)
plain man in the street respects, nothing but
brutal strength and ruthlessness -- women,
too, for that matter, women and children.
They need wholesome fear. .They want to fear
something* They want someone to frighten them
and make them shudderingly submissive
• 204 -
(iiHitler
) • . .how
:'
did the eyes of
my boys (Hitler youth) shine when I made clear
to them the necessity of their mission. (M.K. 729).
of Danzig)
of hi&self .^
tion ^
— the nobility were the superior race'. He,
an illegitimate child.
athletics*
more Germans.
. ^
- 207 -
individual-
(d) Hitler's own life is one of
yet he
istic anarchy - self-willed and disorderly and
pxmctilious
preaches "my new order" and demands
reported by Rauschning.
us is a statement of Hitler's
young,
(i) I km hegihnilng with the
Y^s, .we are old
we older ones ai-e used up,n the marrow. . .we
alreadv We ar e rotten t
f^^'ttl:.A rZ ".n^ .entimenUi.- We are bearing
pas t; ana have on
; ^^ ^!::L» If' » humiliating
Xou of serfdom
our bi^Xthe dull recoiiec L
..
my magnificent youngster^l
and servility.. But
etc* \'-' .'
,- .-./. .^
'
is tempted to abanddn
himself in Kling>«.or'3
gardeS! to the lusts and excesses of corrupt
th. elite of
llviS^ation, instead of ^joining e,puioux ^
^
kniehts who guard the secret of 411 allmen^_^f
;?^^!?r„o .>.! .offering frott the
V, LI : corrupted . bi^
: How cTn^i^i^puriry
...mount the
^
e Jewish Race.,
IV. we q^tlve Cathexis of th
to have been, in
Anti-Semitism and toliat what seer^s
of this sentiment:
his case, the chief determinants
• y
- 208 -
- 209 -
ideology^
- 210 -
VI. SECTIONS B, C, D, E.
DEVELOPIvIENT OP HITLER »S SEX COMPLEXES
1. Pull appreciation
' ' n ^m .
of » the importance of the
I I
I I 1 .
-
I
-
.
.., I . I ,1.1
^
• . • ,.";.... , ,.
•I
given a social movement' by the wild fervor and
tion.
longings.
pertinent, -
,
I ; I . ,
• -
- 214 .
action
m
i" n «
does not take
ii « " I
placei if the emotions are
I >ii I *! II
«i
not
Ml. ' '
'
"^ '
*
'
'
" ^1. II II
. I, I
iheetlriga,
I iiaiiM Wf
I ii B r i a ill
rallies,
|,iw , 1 111,1,11, I i{ .,,
arid
n
il
feiatival a.^
M m n n
l ii ii ii i
This
^ involves
not only an appreoiation of what the artist --» the
writer, musician, and painter — can accomplish
in the way of evoking pbjpular support but also the
this protectiVeness.
- 215 -
pronouncement
social issues.
^
Many of the specific abilities listed above are
exercized as part and parcel of his quite unusual
- . 220 -
PREDICTIONS
- 222 -
weep^
- 223 -
5. Hitler may
M ill r
II
commit ^1.suicide;
.n il ^ H
I III . I M l IP I.. Itll. 11 > .ll.*!
- Hitler has often
that either 3 or 4. .
\
.
SECTION V