Edison
Community College
Adolf Hitler: Oratory Genius
By Caitlin Grote
Communications 121
In
the United States, every history class has some unit over the
actions and oratory of a single man, who ruled a country with his own
persuasive energy and finesse. This man was born a nobody, and died one
of the
most powerful men in the world. Adolf Hitler was born April 20, 1889 to
Alois
Hitler and Klara Polzl. He was the fourth of six children. After an
average childhood,
young Adolf discovered a love of warfare through a book belonging to
his father
about the Franco-Prussian War. Later, after the death of his father,
Adolf
dropped out of school and began working as a laborer and painter. In
his late
biography, he states that he first became an Anti-Semite in Vienna.
When World
War 1 broke out, Hitler joined the Bavarian army as an Austrian foot
soldier.
After Germany’s loss, Hitler became embittered and his ideological
development
began. He decided to get into politics, and having no experience of his
own,
Hitler began to study the doctrines of famous Marxists such as Anton
Drexler.
After joining the German Workers Party, or the DAP, and began his
mentorship
under Dietrich Eckhart. The DAP became the National Socialist German
Workers
Party. After a mutiny, Hitler, using manipulation, became the party
leader for
the NSDAP. This period, around July 1921 and on, marked the beginning
of
Adolf’s career as a politician and orator.
As
the chairperson of the NSDAP, Hitler began giving speeches to
packed houses of people. One of the oratorical strategies Hitler is
well known
for is the use of scapegoats. He knew how to sympathize with the German
people’s problems, and then blame those problems on those who were in
power. He
convinced the people that he was one of them, a laborer, a lover, the
average
oppressed German. Adolf Hitler knew his audience, one of the
fundamental
requirements of a great orator, and he knew how to manipulate them.
He
used the three essentials of any good argument, Ethos (ethics),
Pathos (Feelings), and Logos (logic). More importantly than just
talking about
them, his speeches had the ability to influence these fundamentals in
those he
spoke to. In large groups and small, between Adolf’s eyes and rhetoric,
his
speeches were hypnotic to all who attended. Hitler possessed an innate
knowledge of crowd psychology. He used peer pressure to his advantage,
strategically placing those loyal to him within the crowds to start the
chants
of “Sieg Heil” that grew to include the entire mass.
The now shortened “Nazi Party” began to
base
their doctrine on Italian fascism.
Another
way that Hitler became a skilled orator was by studying the
dictator tactics of Benito Mussolini. He tried to emulate Mussolini’s
March on
Rome, and was highly effective, gaining the support of thousands of new
followers. There is even a story of him interrupting a speech, and, by
force of
pistol, gaining three nationalist followers who were sternly against
him.
Unfortunately this victory was short lived, as Adolf was soon arrested
for High
treason and sentenced to five years in jail. Even in the depths of his
despair,
when he contemplated suicide, Hitler continued communicating with his
followers
through letters and frequent visitors. It was also at this time that he
wrote
his autobiography, Mein Kampf or “my struggles”.
After
being released from jail four years early, Adolf’s political
ambitions were not only renewed, but also strengthened. Hitler was
nominated as
president and after coming close, was appointed as chancellor under
President
Von Hindenburg. With
this new power,
Hitler urged through an act that appointed the chancellor as president
upon the
death of the prior, kind of like our current arrangement with the vice
president. Suspiciously enough, the day after this act was passed,
President
von Hindenburg mysteriously passed, and little Adolf became Adolf
Hitler,
Führer und Reichskanzler (leader and chancellor), one of the most
powerful men
in the civilized world.
What
happened after is well known. Hitler gained the support of his
fellow citizens and allied with Italy and Japan and launched a
full-scale war,
against the other countries of Europe and Asia, and the Jews, gypsies,
homosexuals and handicapped of the world. The military aspect is not
the focus
here. Even though Hitler was a military genius and anti-Semite, almost
none of
his success would have been possible without strong diplomatic skills.
Germany,
Italy, Japan and the other minor axis powers were sticks, that alone
were
easily broken, and together formed a mighty faggot that none could
fracture, or
so it seemed. The Second World War lasted 6 years, from around
1939-1945. The
effects of the war and the holocaust, also Hitler’s doing, still haunt
the
world today.
The
effects of Hitler’s communications in the 30’s and 40’s
affected millions of people across Europe, in an event that will
forever be
remembered as the Holocaust. Hitler’s hatred for those different than
him,
Jews, gypsies, handicapped, homosexual, anyone who was not of Adolf’s
“master
race.” He isolated these people into concentration camps. Hitler used
his
skills as an orator to brainwash millions of youth and citizens of
Germany into
joining his private police, the Gestapo, and his Hitler Youth, and
other
military groups dedicated to the service of the Führer. These
brainwashed
masses were prepared to do anything their precious leader asked of
them, even
kill.
Even
those in the camps had submitted themselves to Hitler’s will,
and eventually stopped resisting, resigning themselves to their doomed
fate. Those
who eventually escaped entrapment faced severe psychological and
physical
trauma, most never completely recovered. Aside from the victims, Hitler
also
impacted those whom he brainwashed, after his suicide and the end of
the war,
these people had no more purpose, many killed themselves or ended up in
asylums. Outside of Germany, the war travelled across Europe and into
Asia and
the United States, bringing the U.S. out of the Great Depression, and
many
other countries into financial wormholes. Even now, associations such
as
N.A.T.O. (disbanded), the United Nations, etc. came out of Hitler’s
oratory
conquering of the eastern world.
In
the end, even though he eventually failed in his world conquest,
Hitler’s oratory left a scar on the world that remains to this day. He
killed
hundreds of thousands of people, who’s families are forever impacted.
World War
2 led to advances in science, such as the Atomic Bomb, and diplomacy,
with the
eventual creation of the United Nations, and many other areas.
Moreover, almost
all of them can be traced back to Hitler’s communicatory skills. The
impact of
Adolf’s communication, oral, nonverbal etc, can be seen both then and
now in
many aspects of life, and proves that he is and was one of the greatest
orators
of all time.
While
some editing may have
been done for grammar or clarity, the choice of topic and discussion in
this
and other Communication 121 student Term Projects is solely the result
of the
research completed by the student. Read the County News Online
introduction for
these papers here.
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