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Most days, my students leave class in high spirits, noisily pushing back their chairs and chatting away animatedly as they head off to another class, a cup of coffee or a nap. Not this time.

After an hour and a half spent watching the infamous Jud Suss, one of the most popular and critically acclaimed feature films the Nazis ever produced, they left the room utterly subdued, even drained.

Flickr/Judy **

Under the skillful direction of Veit Harlan, the fall-from-grace of an 18th century German Jewish financier was transformed into an electrifying movie, a modern cautionary tale. In Harlan’s hands, History became grist for the mill of Nazi propaganda and the demonizing of the latter-day Jew.

As we sat in Room 202, Rome Hall, in 2012, History cast a long shadow on us, too.

Later that day, the class gathered once again, this time to watch a documentary about Veit Harlan himself, which is succinctly and effectively titled Harlan. Like the subject of his 1940 film, the director also fell from grace:  The Allies put him on trial for “crimes against humanity.” Although eventually acquitted of the charges, Harlan never quite regained his footing. ...continue reading "Reeling"