The Rhetoric of Hitler's "Battle"


The Rhetoric of Hitler's "Battle" is an influential essay written by Kenneth Burke in 1939 which offered a rhetorical analysis of Adolf Hitler's rise to power in Germany. Much of Burke's analysis focuses on Hitler's Mein Kampf. Burke identified four tropes as specific to Hitler's rhetoric: inborn dignity, projection device, symbolic rebirth, and commercial use. Several other tropes are discussed in the essay, "Persuasion".

Tropes

Common enemy

One trope is the idea of the common enemy. Without an enemy with a mindless determination to destroy everything good and beautiful, all states struggle with the economic and social problems of unemployment and poverty. The idea of a common enemy is thus a symbol of the evil against which people must unite, and it distracts the people from politically-inconvenient issues by relating all evils to the common rhetorical enemy. According to Burke, that createa an antithesis. We are born separate individuals and divided by class or other criteria and so identification is a compensation to division.. He sees that human need to identify with or belong to a group as providing a rich resource for those interested in joining us or, more importantly, persuading us. To promote social cohesion, antithesis makes a simple balancing statement, "We do this" but "They do that". Thw symmetry creates an expression of conjoined opposites, which stigmatises the latter and encourages the former to cohere by doing only "this". At first, the enemy may be local politicians or other voices that might criticise the protagonist's actions. Then, all opposing voices are seen as antithetical to unity: without a united voice, the outside enemies will gain the upper hand. If the nation goes to war, fascism requires everybody in society and every aspect of society to be involved in the war effort and machine and so the society fights as one organism under the leader.

Geographical materialization

All roads lead to Rome. In Ancient Rome, that was literally and metaphorically true. All roads radiate from from the capital of the Roman Empire, and all tribute and authority were owed to the Emperors. That is a form of cognitive mapping, which associates inspiring ideology and strong leadership with a particular location. Hence, Hitler promoted Munich as the place to which all roads must lead, with geography materializing the ideology of fascism.

Unifying voice

The unification rhetoric demands a unifying voice: the entire nation must speak as one person. That is the essence of the authoritarian ideal and produces a totalitarian one-party state.

Projection devices

Projection devices are scapegoating tactics which personalise the initially-vague threats posed by the common enemy. At a social level, the internal problems of unemployment and poor trading performances are directly attributed to the activities of the "identified others". Simplification is a particularly-effective rhetorical device to deal with an uncritical population by permitting permits rhetoricians to rise to power through their persuasive abilities and frequently outmanoeuvering those with expert knowledge who do not communicate well. In this context, Burke identified Hitler's use of apodictic argumentation in which anecdotal experiences are asserted as proof of his social analysis.

Inborn dignity

It is usual to define a national ideal, archetype or class of citizen as a measuring stick by which all other types of people are to be judged. Thw archetype will be heroic, noble and dignified to appeal to the vanity in the majority, and the others will be subhuman and easily distinguished by reference to their ethnicity, religion or politics. For that rhetoric to be effective, it must always address existing prejudices. Hitler proposed the Manichean antithesis of superior: inferior through the superiority of das Volk, the Aryan race, over the inferior races.

Symbolic rebirth

Wink and others identify symbolic rebirth rhetoric as allowing a people to aspire towards a new utopian society. When the scapegoat is eliminated, a rebirth will occur. The morally-negative action of elimination is justified by a positive goal of symbolic rebirth in which all ideals are realised. It will occur only once in a lifetime.

Commercial use

Another trope is commercial use, which offers a non-economic interpretation of economic problems that appeals to the class that will benefit the most if the competition is removed. Thus, Burke identifies Hitler's attribution of Germany's economic difficulties to "Jewish" moneylenders by suggesting that if they were removed, "Aryan" finance would be in control.

Journal citations

The following journal articles reference the essay: