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Swastika Night

Swastika Night
Swastika night.gif
Cover of the Feminist Press edition of Swastika Night
Author Murray Constantine
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Dystopian novel
Publisher Victor Gollancz Ltd
Publication date
1937
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 287 pp
ISBN
OCLC 12162019
823/.912 19
LC Class PR6003.U45 S8 1985

Swastika Night is a futuristic novel by Katharine Burdekin, writing under the pseudonym Murray Constantine, first published in 1937. The book was a Left Book Club selection in 1940.

The novel is inspired by Adolf Hitler's claim that Nazism would create a "Thousand Year Reich".

The novel was forgotten for many years, until it was republished in the 1980s.

Literary historian Andy Croft has described it as "the most original of all the many anti-fascist dystopias of the late 1930s".

Swastika Night takes place in a world where the Nazis and Japanese won World War II. It follows the protagonist Alfred, an Englishman in his 30s who works as a ground mechanic for the German Empire in the Salisbury Aerodrome. Alfred comes to Germany on a holy pilgrimage to see the holy sites of Hitlerism, the religion in this Nazi dominated world. These sites include the holy forest and the sacred aeroplane in Munich with which Hitler won the war by personally flying to Moscow it is said. In this world Hitler is seen as a seven foot tall, long blonde haired, blue-eyed man who was “exploded” from the head of God the Thunderer and a god in his own right. He is preached about by Knights (a cross between the traditional, feudal knights and a priest) who pass this job down from father to son.

When Alfred arrives at his Nazi friend Hermann’s village, he meets the Knight there, an old man by the name of Friedrich von Hess, Hermann works on this Knight’s land. The Knight reveals to Alfred about how history was distorted by a man who even when confronted by the truth proclaimed Hitler a god. The writing of this man’s book caused the Nazis to burn everything that contradicted the fact – even the book itself – and also anything that revealed life before the empire or during Hitler’s life. An ancestor of von Hess wrote about the truth and entrusted the secret to his descendants, he also obtained and preserved a picture of Hitler and a young blonde woman that Alfred originally mistakes for Hitler. This convinces the already sceptical Alfred that Hitler was not a god when he sees that Hitler was a small, brown haired man with a paunch.

Alfred then vows to return women to how they should be as in the novel they have become ugly things, with shaved heads and no self-respect used for solely reproduction and kept in a place called the women’s quarters from where they cannot escape and are seen as little more than animals. He also vows that he shall teach what is in his book to his fellow Englishmen and others so that eventually they can cause the shattering of the German Empire as the belief that holds it together falls apart. He presses that it must be an ideological, spiritual rebellion as a violent rebellion would be crushed by the occupation armies of the Germans. The reader may also realise that a violent rebellion would also only adhere to the Hitlerian beliefs of violence and strength.


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