Storm of Steel - Author And Officer Ernst Jünger I WHO DID WHAT IN WW1?

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
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    Storm of Steel (In Stahlgewittern) by Ernst Jünger is one of the most harrowing German accounts of World War 1. The author was an officer on the Western Front and fought with the assault troops and stormtroopers until summer 1918.
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    Hart, Peter. The Great War. A Combat History of the First World War, Oxford University Press, 2013.
    Hart, Peter. The Great War. 1914-1918, Profile Books, 2013.
    Stone, Norman. World War One. A Short History, Penguin, 2008.
    Keegan, John. The First World War, Vintage, 2000.
    Hastings, Max. Catastrophe 1914. Europe Goes To War, Knopf, 2013.
    Hirschfeld, Gerhard. Enzyklopädie Erster Weltkrieg, Schöningh Paderborn, 2004
    Michalka, Wolfgang. Der Erste Weltkrieg. Wirkung, Wahrnehmung, Analyse, Seehamer Verlag GmbH, 2000
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 728

  • @nimbledick9869
    @nimbledick9869 3 роки тому +67

    Storm of Steel had an amazing analogy for what being shelled is like: "Imagine you are securely tied to a post, being menaced by a man swinging a heavy hammer. Now the hammer has been taken back over his head, ready to be swung, now it's cleaving through the air towards you, on the point of touching your skull, then it's struck the post, and the splinters are flying"

  • @hansmahr8627
    @hansmahr8627 6 років тому +457

    In one of the later chapters of Storm of Steel Jünger is wounded and thinks he's dying. Here's what he wrote about that experience:
    'It had got me at last. At the same time as feeling I had been hit, I felt the bullet taking
    away my life. I had felt Death's hand once before, on the road at Mory - but this time
    his grip was firmer and more determined. As I came down heavily on the bottom of the
    trench, I was convinced it was all over. Strangely, that moment is one of very few in
    my life of which I am able to say they were utterly happy. I understood, as in a flash of
    lightning, the true inner purpose and form of my life. I felt surprise and disbelief that it
    was to end there and then, but this surprise had something untroubled and almost merry
    about it. Then I heard the firing grow less, as if I were a stone sinking under the surface
    of some turbulent water. Where I was going, there was neither war nor enmity.'

    • @thegadflygang5381
      @thegadflygang5381 2 роки тому +45

      @@sigvardbjorkman quite remarkable how far Western man has fallen. The so called "worst students" and even what was quantified as "barely literate farmboys" produced some of the most vibrant and moving writings we have from almost every conflict of the past few hundred years

    • @greysnake2903
      @greysnake2903 Рік тому +1

      👍

    • @VVeltanschauung187
      @VVeltanschauung187 Рік тому +9

      @@thegadflygang5381 I don't think Ernst Junger would qualify as either a "worst student" or "barely literate". He was German, which means he came from a highly literate nation like Germany

    • @thegadflygang5381
      @thegadflygang5381 Рік тому +8

      @@VVeltanschauung187 you misunderstand me friend, it was a generalized statement not directly focussed on Mr Junger. I was thinking beyond Germany and on most European stock in general. Some of the most beautiful well thought out letters I have ever read come from random soldiers during the American Civil War.
      My point was despite being "more educated" in modernity the populace Is notably dumber in everything from math to grammar and lit. For generations men who might not have made it past early schooling somehow managed to grow into provocative and thoughtful adults

    • @vagusmaximus3711
      @vagusmaximus3711 Рік тому +12

      @@thegadflygang5381 because we live in the world of overstimulation which prevents any deep thought or struggle. I know it myself being 19 years old guy.

  • @stevesb97
    @stevesb97 6 років тому +665

    Anyone who says Storm of Steel is war mongering has never read it. It is brutally realistic, neither pro- or anti- war, just the facts.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 6 років тому +59

      It's seen as war mongering because he describes the war as a positive experience for those who survived and especially for himself.

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому +151

      Just the facts except the ones he left out or didn't include from his diaries in the 8 or so versions of this book.

    • @stevesb97
      @stevesb97 6 років тому +13

      Such as?

    • @danielkuddes6050
      @danielkuddes6050 4 роки тому +43

      @@TheGreatWar wow, give this guy reddit gold! /s

    • @gronizherz3603
      @gronizherz3603 4 роки тому +33

      Exactly, it mostly literally just describes what happens, often without much comment! Like describing a view, or what happens to someone who gets wounded etc. Only rarely does he mentions comments from himself like "Making me see this prisoner made me think 'What a pity to shoot at such people'".

  • @sdbentrup
    @sdbentrup 3 роки тому +138

    Fun fact: Jünger was also the last living recipient of the military Pour le Merite.

  • @ottovonbearsmark8876
    @ottovonbearsmark8876 3 роки тому +112

    One of the most fascinating part of the books is during the Kaiserschlact, when he talks about taking a break after taking a several trenches, and then ‘By popular requests, we continued the advance.’

  • @EdVarkarion
    @EdVarkarion 6 років тому +738

    Remarque: spends only two weeks at war, writes a novel about the horrors of war
    Junger: Fights the war from beginning to end, writes about the excitement and fascination of war.

    • @Tx290
      @Tx290 6 років тому +139

      EdSkywalker just finished the book and I am just perplexed at how he survived it. The number of close shaves he had, one wrong step and he'd have died

    • @fanta4897
      @fanta4897 6 років тому +88

      Some troops were just unbelievably lucky. A.Hitler also survived mostly because of luck(moving from one place in trench into another just moments before it gets hit by artillery, I even heard that one artillery shell landed just before his feet and didn't explode because of malfunction).

    • @arnekrug939
      @arnekrug939 6 років тому +108

      Niall Horan The luck of one man is the demise of another. For every soldier who evaded one of those close hits, one or more that were behind him got killed.
      We are always fascinated by people that survived the entirety of WW1 or WW2 but what about the ones who managed to come through for years only to be hit by a shell or get a deadly infection months or weeks before the end?

    • @MandalorV7
      @MandalorV7 6 років тому +58

      Or how some soldiers will die in an accident after returning home from the war a week later or so. It, sadly, is still quite a common thing today.

    • @rostislavsvoboda7013
      @rostislavsvoboda7013 6 років тому +94

      Jaroslav Hašek: Joins the Austro-Hungarian army gets decorated, gets captured, changes sides, joins czechoslovak legion, changes opinion, joins communists and red army, loses interests in communism and writes a satirical dark comedy.

  • @alcatryst7461
    @alcatryst7461 2 роки тому +211

    Loved this book. I don’t see how people think this is a pro-war book. It’s just a born warrior describing his time throughout one of the worlds most deadliest conflict. Doesn’t sugarcoat it or push a nations agenda. Describes death and carnage as if you were right beside him on the battlefield.

    • @laisphinto6372
      @laisphinto6372 Рік тому +4

      it is neither like most soldiers it is telling how it is

    • @THEBIGGAME683
      @THEBIGGAME683 Рік тому +5

      You a right but at the same time, the book glorifies war. But that's okay. He's a soldier afterall

    • @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883
      @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 Рік тому +14

      ​​@@THEBIGGAME683Not exactly glorifies war. There are plenty of sections concerning the horror. It does kind of celebrate his personal formative experience of war. It is war as a personal experience and I found the overall outlook to be similar to that of Australian Frederic Manning's "The Middle Parts of Fortune". Cause is irrelevent, the big picture is irrelevent. The focus is simply what the individual experienced. Morality and purpose don't come into play.

    • @kingkoi6542
      @kingkoi6542 Рік тому +8

      ​@@THEBIGGAME683War is the steel mill that purifies man of his small inconveniences. It was literally a baptism in fire. It's one of the realest and most metal books...

    • @sabas7549
      @sabas7549 11 місяців тому +5

      @@kingkoi6542he even notices that himself near the end when him and some of his veteran comrades are casually discussing the day in the midst of an offensive and he notices a green recruit looking at them just utterly awe struck by the situation they’re in

  • @eze2576
    @eze2576 2 роки тому +60

    My favorite part is when they're walking into a bombardment, and one of the newer guys says something along the lines of, "That Lieutenant isn't afraid of anything!" and someone informs him, "That Lieutenant knows what's what. If there's one headed for us, he's the first one to take cover."

  • @duxae1617
    @duxae1617 2 роки тому +101

    This book was insane, half the book was basically him talking about being shelled

    • @kommissarvalkyre2054
      @kommissarvalkyre2054 Рік тому +10

      He spend 3 Years like this. I know he made "vacations" from the front, but he was 50 to 75% of his Time in a trench or in his hideout waiting for a shell to hit him.

  • @ernsthaftunus331
    @ernsthaftunus331 6 років тому +1408

    No matter how jung you are, ernst was jünger

    • @laurenhulbert4410
      @laurenhulbert4410 6 років тому +46

      Thanks dad... *facepalm*

    • @dl4350
      @dl4350 6 років тому +3

      lol, man

    • @MFvanBylandt
      @MFvanBylandt 6 років тому +8

      And probably he became older too!

    • @gflex3505
      @gflex3505 6 років тому +16

      Obi Wan Kenobi shouldnt you be busy watching pokemon streams? lmfao

    • @canicheenrage
      @canicheenrage 6 років тому +3

      Tsss

  • @Drogmir
    @Drogmir 6 років тому +223

    After reading Storm of Steel about a year ago, I'm convinced it needs to be added as an additional pairing to school curriculum who usually give "All Quiet in the Western Front" only to read about WW1.
    Whilst Ernst Junger definitely has a very singular nationalistic view to his experiences in the war. His matter of fact observations of of pure carnage of what he went through, can very well make Storm of Steel a far stronger anti-war novel than All Quiet. It really gets to the core about how artillery just constantly annihilates everyone more than anything else, but also the little things such as boredom, the constant threat of rats consuming everything, and how all the while technology of war keeps advancing.
    Highlights of his book involve him during the early war playing around with a device in a captured trench he had never seen before only realizing years later that it was a grenade, or how when digging into the trenches he and his men had to dig through corpses trapped from the dirt of arty fire covering them in Verdun, or an especially poignant moment during the Spring Offensive how after killing countless men in the assaults. Junger is about to kill a British officer but the officer pulls out a picture of his own family. Junger decides to spare him and move on and that moment stuck with him years later.
    It's also clear to anyone who reads Storm of Steel that while Junger may say that the war years were highlights, he's constantly struggling to reconcile his nationalistic viewpoints of the war and excitement with battle itself; with the cold distant ways his friends and homeland is being swept aside through the events of the war.
    It's an absolutely fascinating alternative depiction of the same events and highly recommended reading that I feel you get what you put in it. You can certainly find the super nationalistic anti-Remarque stuff if you wanted to, but I would say you can equally find a similar amount of basic observation of horrendous wartime conditions that strongly puts forward an anti-war message inadvertent to Junger's actual intent.

    • @lekal6247
      @lekal6247 4 роки тому +12

      Not sure how you can make his book ''anti-war''

    • @danielkuddes6050
      @danielkuddes6050 4 роки тому +72

      Does everything have to be read in the context of being anti-war? Honor, duty, and a sense of adventure are still virtues today though they are no longer much encouraged. The book and man are complex. They are much more interesting than simply being pro or anti war.

    • @rhodesianwojak2095
      @rhodesianwojak2095 4 роки тому +14

      @@danielkuddes6050 those are banned under the American Empire sorry bro

    • @danielkuddes6050
      @danielkuddes6050 4 роки тому +12

      @@rhodesianwojak2095 I made so many effort posts under this vid most of them got deleted. I know the feels wojak.

    • @rhodesianwojak2095
      @rhodesianwojak2095 4 роки тому

      @@danielkuddes6050oof

  • @DotepenecPL
    @DotepenecPL 4 роки тому +113

    Obviously, Death got tired after trying to take him several times, just said "nah, whatever" somewhere in the middle of the war and forgot about him for another 90 years.

    • @eze2576
      @eze2576 2 роки тому +16

      Probably when he decided to take a nap in the middle of a bombardment and woke up in a house that exploded on him

    • @cameron4562
      @cameron4562 2 роки тому +16

      @@eze2576 Its crazy how many times he escaped certain death. Like when he bent to tie his shoe and artillery exploded ahead of him. Or how he was taken out of action from a piece of shrapnel that went through a little hole in the wall past a group of soldiers just to hit his leg, and while he was recovering, his entire platoon was wiped out. Or mortars that landed right between his legs, but was a dud. Its insane. I think it was either luck or some kind of divine intervention.

    • @eze2576
      @eze2576 2 роки тому +8

      @@cameron4562 It has to be both. I've found in many war accounts of men talking about having a premonition, a feeling that something isn't right. Louis Barthas mentions the same thing in Poilu, and he too has several occasions where a dud lands at his feet. There's also an occasion when he and another corporal agree to switch lookout times. Last minute, the other corporal changes his mind so they don't do it after all, and as you guessed it, the other corporal gets it.

    • @12345678927164
      @12345678927164 Місяць тому +1

      No, death was scared of him.

  • @ganjakingnr1
    @ganjakingnr1 6 років тому +1284

    When you're so hardcore they still need trigger warnings 100 years later

    • @Mrkiller836
      @Mrkiller836 6 років тому +172

      It's quite telling about our current world order that a video about the slaughter of millions of people in trenches doesn't give "trigger warnings" but a little bit of German illiberal sentiment mixed with anti-British/French propaganda does.

    • @sandran17
      @sandran17 6 років тому +23

      Having a weird fetish for war doesnt make you hardcore.

    • @Timon-IrishFolk
      @Timon-IrishFolk 6 років тому +27

      2uyhgf5
      I think it's more of a thing with the network that is, I believe, still hosting them. Their network is located in Germany and Jünger is very controversial and could be harmfull for that network.

    • @varana
      @varana 6 років тому +65

      Err... the warning at the start was about the more graphic images than usual in this episode and the blunt descriptions, not about any of Jünger's sentiment towards the War.

    • @taan1424
      @taan1424 6 років тому +45

      ᅚᅚ I would not describe his book as "anti-british" or "anti-french". He often remarks on bravery of his enemy. There are also passages mentioning his encounter with a french girl, at least in the edition I read.

  • @roterbengel5701
    @roterbengel5701 6 років тому +768

    Fun Fact: He was also among the first persons that tried LSD

    • @slymandrake
      @slymandrake 6 років тому +79

      And his book about his experience 'A Visit to Godenholm' actually predates Aldous Huxley's more famous drug-taking account 'The Doors of Perception'.

    • @DissentingDogLevi
      @DissentingDogLevi 6 років тому +39

      I knew he was cool.

    • @abyssalknight4081
      @abyssalknight4081 6 років тому

      noice

    • @timwodzynski7234
      @timwodzynski7234 6 років тому

      Trippy man 😂🙃

    • @zoperxplex
      @zoperxplex 6 років тому

      How old was he?

  • @walaacademy7292
    @walaacademy7292 5 років тому +79

    Most memorable of moments were when he was in the somme offensive and he was prone with some soldiers, among others running to the enemy lines while being machine gunned and artillery exploded. There, among all chaos a rabbit passed the front and the soldiers beside them started shooting at the rabbit and warcrying, it was so absurd he had to burst a laugh or when in Cambrai, it was so cold, but he began feeling hot, under enemy fire, he shouts "NOW THE LIEUTENANT JUNGER TAKES HIS COAT OFF, BEWARE", his unit laughed so hard after the assault that portrayed that experience of war that makes a true man.
    Everyone should read this awesome book.

  • @ArkadiBolschek
    @ArkadiBolschek 6 років тому +339

    Plenty of men survived the Great War and went on to reflect on their memoirs the horror, the carnage, the desperation and the senselessness of it.
    And then there's this guy.

    • @onlinecommentator2616
      @onlinecommentator2616 6 років тому +13

      ArkadiBolschek A new perspective, a pro-war one ;)

    • @onlinecommentator2616
      @onlinecommentator2616 5 років тому +71

      @GoldenEagle "War is the ultimate fight for existence on this earth" ~Jünger

    • @TheIfifi
      @TheIfifi 5 років тому +40

      @@onlinecommentator2616 that isnt pro war man... its just fact.

    • @onlinecommentator2616
      @onlinecommentator2616 5 років тому +3

      @@TheIfifi You can look it up tho, he loved war.

    • @TheIfifi
      @TheIfifi 5 років тому +60

      @@onlinecommentator2616 That does not make him a sociopath. There are many reason one might love war. Look up Sebastian Junger(ironically unrelated) "why veterans might miss war"

  • @ConeFlower-gx2qk
    @ConeFlower-gx2qk Рік тому +25

    Junger is honestly hilarious. Like the way this book was described people don’t mention his super dry sense of humor. Also I think it’s interesting that he also had an enlisted perspective along with an officer’s perspective seeing how he was both

  • @amerigo88
    @amerigo88 6 років тому +22

    I grew up on the World War I viewpoint of "Silly, pointless war. Trenches, going over the top, getting mowed down. Battle of the Somme, Battle of Verdun, Gallipoli campaign, poppies, All Quiet on the Western Front. Ernest Hemingway and the rest of the 1920's Paris literary crowd making peace with the recent past." For a military history junkie, the only relief where the struggle seemed to "matter" was the few sea battles fought in the North Sea and the war in the air above the trenches.
    If you read "Storm of Steel" by Ernst Junger, it's a completely different perspective. Instead of just - "We fought for a silly cause and all our friends died to achieve nothing", Junger sees war as bringing out the best and worst in human beings. It is the ultimate challenge and surviving the storm of steel leaves one cleansed of minor concerns. You see his never ending faith in ultimate victory as the Spring 1918 offensives begin. You also see the Allies of WWII over the horizon as the Germans of Spring 1918 find themselves facing ground strafing aircraft, tanks, and an overwhelming disparity in supplies. "Storm of Steel" is an amazing personal account of life in the trenches, written by a daredevil with a very keen eye for detail. His truth is much more improbable than fiction.

    • @danielkuddes6050
      @danielkuddes6050 4 роки тому +8

      So many people just whinge "well, he wasn't anti-war enough". I don't think they read the book or if they have their just a bit too modern to get. These people are the embodiment of Nietzsche's slave morality. Pearls before swine...

  • @northland7885
    @northland7885 6 років тому +188

    I just wanna recommended the documentary ''102 Years in the Heart of Europe: A Portrait of Ernst Jünger'' (You can see it here on youtube) if you wanna hear more from the man, It was made a year before he died.

    • @codygranrud6212
      @codygranrud6212 6 років тому

      Northland, have a link?

    • @northland7885
      @northland7885 6 років тому +5

      Here: ua-cam.com/video/0Ju5HFoD20U/v-deo.html
      Otherwise just search for ''102 Years in the Heart of Europe: A Portrait of Ernst Jünger''' on youtube

    • @codygranrud6212
      @codygranrud6212 6 років тому

      Northland thanks

    • @BigBoss-sm9xj
      @BigBoss-sm9xj 6 років тому

      Thanks!

    • @saralester3741
      @saralester3741 6 років тому +4

      Northland Seen it and it's great Ernst Junger's life during both World Wars and after is very interesting, I recommend his work on LSD. It's a new perspective on the drug for research, he was the first to drop acid with it's creator Albert Hoffman.

  • @KAMiKAZE-T.V.
    @KAMiKAZE-T.V. 3 роки тому +13

    I remember he said that every man has their own way of dealing with the stress of trench warfare and that his way of dealing with it was a mixture of red wine and cognac. What a beast i have nothing but respect for this man so what if he left some stuff out the fact that he survived the somme, arras, ypre, the kaiserschlact etc means he is nothing short of a legend. One of my heros!

  • @Waelser93
    @Waelser93 6 років тому +22

    When you told about the fatal hit on his company I tought you would also talk about his breakdown. I am fascinated about Jünger, both his Kriegstagebuch and the Stahlgewitter. But especially his honesty about just sitting there crying after so many of his man ceased to exist has to be one of the defining parts of his book...next to the quote "I found myself at the most dangerous place imagineable...but also on that of utmost authority". Thank you for not going for the "Jünger glorified war" theme!

    • @dabtican4953
      @dabtican4953 3 роки тому +1

      What is the difference between those? I'm looking to read about his experiences

  • @ottovonbearsmark8876
    @ottovonbearsmark8876 3 роки тому +8

    George Orwell once said something along the the lines of ‘No true nationalist has ever made it to the front line and stayed that way’ Clearly he never met Ernst.

  • @hemshah4127
    @hemshah4127 6 років тому +236

    I had read Storm of Stell ( Stahlgewittern in German) last year (english translation by Michael Hofmann). I must say it is a well written memoir. It is one of the best accounts of the Great War. After reading it I had a lot more respect about the German Army and the people of German Empire.

    • @Sniper_Cat_71
      @Sniper_Cat_71 6 років тому +3

      It's one of my favorite books of all time. You can listen to the audio version on youtube, it's amazing.

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому +101

      extrapolating one man's edited experience of war to a whole nation of tens of million is pretty bold.

    • @cigolsimons1768
      @cigolsimons1768 6 років тому +6

      The Great War ^ This

    • @thomasemond2173
      @thomasemond2173 6 років тому +13

      The Great War It’s not like the german empire and army were some of the greatest at that time.

    • @fishyjoes4615
      @fishyjoes4615 6 років тому +8

      Home Of The Brave greatest of that time? Yet they lost the war didn't they?

  • @The_Devil_Himself
    @The_Devil_Himself 6 років тому +252

    That wasn't much more disturbing than any other of the Great War's videos.

    • @SonicsniperV7
      @SonicsniperV7 6 років тому +12

      Now granted I have yet to read "Storm of Steel", but the way Indy describes him and the excerpts shown makes me wonder if he wasn't a sociopath.

    • @edwardcamp3376
      @edwardcamp3376 6 років тому +2

      They had way more dead bodies than usual. I think that's all it was.

    • @genericpersonx333
      @genericpersonx333 6 років тому +16

      Glorifying war is something that most Europeans are taught to avoid doing for various reasons. It is only logical for a show based in Germany with a very large European audience to qualify such content. Unfortunate but logical.

    • @Max_Kraft
      @Max_Kraft 6 років тому +16

      @Pyro Bob Perhaps you will unterstand him more, when you not only read Storm of Steel but "The Adventurous Heart: Figures and Capriccios", "Copse 125: A Chronicle from the Trench Warfare of 1918", "On Pain" and "Storm" too. In fact this war books are his early works and he was a militant nihilist and expressionist at that time. He's not glorifying the war but the front warrior as a new "figure", who is like an Übermensch forged in the fire of a new terrefic world, rising from the ruins of the old world. There is vision of Jünger (and others like his brother Friedrich Georg Jünger, Ernst von Salomon, Gottfried Benn and other frontsoldiers) that this warriors will crush the weak and decadent bourgeois state to establish a new hierarchy. It's not national socialism but more pure new nationalism and nietzscheanism with a spartan ideology, many former german front soldiers & freikorps soldiers shared this masculinist views...

    • @TheIfifi
      @TheIfifi 5 років тому +11

      @@SonicsniperV7 narh. Pre-ww1 seeking glory in war wasnt odd. Junger seems more and adrenaline junkie than anything.

  • @Sheep506
    @Sheep506 9 місяців тому +5

    Storm Of Steel is also unintentionally hilarious in parts. When he talks about stopping to watch shrapnel fall or his lackadaisical attitude towards his close encounters with death or injury is amusing

  • @PilgrimVisions
    @PilgrimVisions 6 років тому +17

    I assign my students Jünger's 1922 essay "Feuer" whenever I teach WWI. It's always a hit, and his comments about living at the edge of death, not to mention the romance of machine warfare, are deeply thought-provoking. "We have reached the most advanced line and are seeing the final preparations. We are eager and precise, for we sense a pressure to be active, to fill the time, to escape from ourselves. Time, which had racked us so in the trenches, a concept that comprehends all conceivable torment, a chain that only death can break. Perhaps in the coming minutes. I know it to be a conscious experience, the quiet flow of an ebbing life into the sea of eternity; I have already stood at times on the border. It is a slow, deep sinking with a ringing in the ear, peaceful and familiar like the sound of Easter bells at home. One should avoid such ponderings, such a readiness to pounce upon mysteries that will never be explained. Everything comes in its own time. Head high, let the thoughts scatter to the winds. Die with dignity-that we can do; we can stride into the ominous dark with a warrior’s cunning and bold vitality. Do not be shaken, smile to the last, even if the smile is only a mask to hide from yourself: that itself is something. A human is incapable of anything greater than mastering oneself in death. Even the immortal gods must envy him that."

    • @user-se1wz7ss1c
      @user-se1wz7ss1c 2 роки тому

      thank you for posting this

    • @frederickstudenheimer3378
      @frederickstudenheimer3378 Рік тому +1

      @brandovlogs you get to see the way war affects people and the reasons why people would glorify war yes glorifying war is unusual but it does happen. My grandpa fought in ww1 and was injured and always somewhat glorified it. He fought in the beginning of the war when he was only 15 going on 16 and pretended to be older and later he fought in the end of the war when he was almost 20. He did all of this and ended up abandoning his education (he started university at 14 somehow). I want to see into the minds of those who somehow glorify war as they tend to be the exceptions to the rule.

  • @amarettomeming9441
    @amarettomeming9441 Рік тому +22

    Chad Storm of Steel vs virgin all quiet on western front

    • @dylanrodrigues
      @dylanrodrigues 4 місяці тому +3

      Ah yes, the virgin anti-war novel. Nothing says virgin like “war is bad maybe and perhaps we should do less of it”… especially the guy himself was wounded in the war.

  • @indianajones4321
    @indianajones4321 Рік тому +17

    Storm of Steel really deserves a movie

    • @notmenotme614
      @notmenotme614 Рік тому +1

      99z of the movie would literally be Jünger relocating from position to position under an artillery barrage. It was quite a boring repetitive book.

    • @Ryuell-gz9to
      @Ryuell-gz9to Рік тому +4

      @@notmenotme614 all quite on western front made it into a movie. I don't see why a proper book can't defeat a cringe pacifist propaganda fan fictions

    • @notmenotme614
      @notmenotme614 Рік тому

      @@Ryuell-gz9to My point is, there’s no interesting storyline to Storm of Steel. Even as a fan of military history, I found it repetitive and tedious towards the end.

  • @rashidabegum3958
    @rashidabegum3958 6 років тому +182

    Indy is the best history teacher. EVER.

    • @turkosicsaba
      @turkosicsaba 6 років тому +4

      Dan Carlin fans might disagree with you there.

    • @JuiceStainded
      @JuiceStainded 6 років тому +5

      rashida begum It''s a great time to be interested in history. Theres so much cool stuff out there for we fans of history.

    • @brandonkirk5357
      @brandonkirk5357 6 років тому

      ^^ ha was just going to say, don't forget Dan Carlin! I was re-listening to blueprint for Armageddon and many Junger quotes came up, then I got 'Storm of Steel' in the mail last week, and now this video notification, so getting my history dose for sure!

    • @eze2576
      @eze2576 2 роки тому

      Dan Carlin is peerless

  • @-et37-
    @-et37- 6 років тому +135

    When you’ve clicked on every Great War Vid you’ve ever seen, videos that detail horrific events, BUT this video starts with “Viewer Discretion is Advised”
    Oh boy

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому +13

      did you also click on the other two videos we made before that have this in the beginning?

    • @-et37-
      @-et37- 6 років тому +5

      The Great War Oh god, there’s 2 others? Cover me, I’m going in

    • @claudegreengrass9174
      @claudegreengrass9174 6 років тому +10

      The Great War why do you put trigger warning on the video. The video is about ww1, disturbing comes with the territory

    • @killer25014
      @killer25014 6 років тому

      Could say that about war in general.

    • @MerlijnDingemanse
      @MerlijnDingemanse 6 років тому

      Its not about the topic but about the overusage of pictures of dead people in this episode

  • @kknives36
    @kknives36 6 років тому +9

    Storm of Steel was the first WW1 book I ever read. My Bulgarian Grandpa was the one who recommended it to me when I was 14. Years later, I'm still just as obsessed as I was then.

  • @chadgrylls5264
    @chadgrylls5264 3 місяці тому +3

    Storm of Steel gives me a strange solace. I work an awful factory job, and I keep a copy on my phone to read on those really crappy, suicidal days when I just feel like running away. It imbues a stoic perseverance, to stay and fulfill my duty.

    • @pumitriii6160
      @pumitriii6160 25 днів тому

      For real. In addition to being an outstanding work of military history, the book really changes your perspectives on war, hardship, masculinity, leadership and just life in general tbh lol

  • @squalgod8410
    @squalgod8410 6 років тому +16

    I loved his book. How he learned to adapt to his situation and how he led his men honorably into combat was truly a great thing in such a horrible war.

    • @re1010
      @re1010 2 роки тому +7

      He was definitely one of those old school "mannno-on-manno" types that has died.

    • @kingkoi6542
      @kingkoi6542 2 роки тому +2

      @@re1010 nah not dead just no longer celebrated unfortunately

  • @user-kf6nc5jv3l
    @user-kf6nc5jv3l 6 років тому +10

    I've read this fantastic book a month ago but I still can't stop thinking about it as it is a masterpiece. He describes every situation in a very gruesome way with the most fitting adjectives one can think of.

  • @christopherflashjohnson3412
    @christopherflashjohnson3412 6 років тому +9

    Thank you for that. I finished Storm of Steel this past fall and was blown away by his account of how the war was a terrible roulette game in heavy favor of the house. There was no rhyme or reason or skill in who died or who lived. Even within the closing pages where he was nearly killed for the last time. Insanity!
    And in the those last few pages, Junger still managed to conjure the maelstrom of dread and impending death. Despite knowing he lived to be well over 100, I still expected him to be struck down. In some terribly sorrowful moment like Winston in the finality of 1984.

  • @__sno__3820
    @__sno__3820 6 років тому +52

    So that's where the name of the first bf1 mission came from

  • @smovex9
    @smovex9 6 місяців тому +3

    If you can read Jünger in German. This mans writing is a rare treat which you shouldn't miss.

    • @pumitriii6160
      @pumitriii6160 25 днів тому

      Did u also read Hofman's translation?

  • @quinnc.2710
    @quinnc.2710 6 років тому +88

    Been waiting for this video since you guys started this series.

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому +15

      wouldn't have felt right to do it earlier

    • @quinnc.2710
      @quinnc.2710 6 років тому +3

      The Great War I knew you'd get to it when it was time. His account shook me far more than almost any other. Thanks guys you seriously do incredible work

    • @nuclearjanitors
      @nuclearjanitors 6 років тому +1

      Same here and thank you for the quality content,Indy, Flo and company.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 6 років тому +2

      Such a strange condition we humans possess, how we can acknowledge the barbarity of war and wish for its speedy end in one respect - while in another wish it could go on forever. I made a similar comment, an old flame bought me a copy of "Storm of Steel" around the same time I discovered this channel so naturally I couldn't wait to see if they included his experiences somewhere down the line. I was born 100 years after him, almost to the year - one year before, technically, 94. I think about the life he lived and how in 1918 he occupied his place in the world while in 2018 I occupy my own and hope to have as enriching a life as him.

  • @desroin
    @desroin 6 років тому +25

    Finally the episode on Ernst Jünger. I read the book in my late teens... it is of course important to remain critical with Mr. Jünger but it's still one of the most important books about WW1 IMHO

    • @lekal6247
      @lekal6247 6 років тому +11

      Why should one remain critical abot Mr. Jünger?

    • @dabtican4953
      @dabtican4953 3 роки тому +4

      @@lekal6247 One should remain critical about everyone

    • @lekal6247
      @lekal6247 3 роки тому +1

      @@dabtican4953 sure, just wondering if there was anything in paticular

    • @dabtican4953
      @dabtican4953 3 роки тому +2

      @@lekal6247 yeah i know was just adding that on, maybe that's what he meant too actually or perhaps he said that cause he doesn't fully agree with junger or maybe both idk

  • @magentuspriest
    @magentuspriest 5 років тому +4

    Just read through this one for like the third time.
    It's amazing how this book/memoir _puts_ you there.

  • @aidanerjohnson560
    @aidanerjohnson560 Рік тому +3

    This is a must read if you’re interested in the Great War. His descriptions of violence are so sharp and brutal, it’s heart breaking.

  • @daviddragos9937
    @daviddragos9937 6 років тому +15

    Amazing book written by one courageous stormtrooper-soldier. Thank you for this post!

  • @claudegreengrass9174
    @claudegreengrass9174 6 років тому +10

    storm of steel is the best war memoir i have ever read

    • @pumitriii6160
      @pumitriii6160 25 днів тому

      I agree, along with The Glass Castle

  • @onlinecommentator2616
    @onlinecommentator2616 6 років тому +6

    Such a great man. War truly is the ultimate fight for existence

  • @kbonh22
    @kbonh22 Рік тому +5

    Reading this makes you realise just how much survival was about sheer luck.
    He was wounded 14 times (shot 7 times, hit by shrapnel the rest and that doesn't include the ricochets and grazing wounds) and made a full recovery while hundreds of men all around him were blown to pieces by shells or killed instantly by headshots.
    His survivor's guilt must have been unbearable.

  • @Shafferhead
    @Shafferhead 7 місяців тому +1

    Book on the way by mail. Cant wait to read it. Just finished All quiet on the western front and it was brilliant

  • @saralester3741
    @saralester3741 6 років тому +29

    Ernst Junger's Storm of Steel ranks right up there with Leon Degrelle's WWII memoir Campaign in Russia: The Waffen SS on the Eastern Front. Both are great books written from first person perspective on the front lines during war, and not many writers can do both.

  • @tomkavulic7178
    @tomkavulic7178 6 років тому +5

    Guy sounds like a certifiable badass.. I'll have to give his diary a read, thanks for informing of this man

  • @limonade7050
    @limonade7050 6 років тому +3

    The thought amazes me that a man who was 19-23 years old could've been killed so many times, but managed to somehow survive and live on for more than 80 years. It could've all just ended in those 4 years and he'd likely be forgotten right there and then and become a statistic like so many others, but his life had just begun and he only experienced 1/5th of it.
    Imagine how many people he was going to meet in the next 80 years and how many memories he was going to make, only a slight twist of faith was needed to instantly erase those to be memories and relations from our timeline.
    Dying young in unfair

  • @VladTevez
    @VladTevez 6 років тому +60

    Long time for a Literature/cultural episode! 👍

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому +10

      we will squeeze in a few more this year

  • @brandonkirk5357
    @brandonkirk5357 6 років тому +7

    I was re-listening to blueprint for Armageddon podcast by Dan Carlin and many Junger quotes came up, then I got 'Storm of Steel' in the mail last week, and now this video notification, so getting my history dose for sure! Thanks Mr. Neidell!!

  • @chawboy32
    @chawboy32 2 роки тому +5

    My favorite part of the book is during the 1918 Spring Offensive when he sees the assault troops. He talks of the young boys with shocks of hair fighting because one called the other a rabbit

  • @alastairsmith1096
    @alastairsmith1096 2 роки тому +2

    I love this channel. I read Storm of steel 30 years ago. Your comparison with All Quiet was spot on. Keep up with your excellent work

  • @Murray.Sutherland
    @Murray.Sutherland 6 років тому +5

    Ernst's memoir finishes up at Rossignol wood. Where my great grand dad was a company CO with the New Zealanders

  • @parkerbillinghurst5473
    @parkerbillinghurst5473 6 років тому +2

    I finished a course on German War literature this Semester, and my prof (I believe he holds a PHD from Berlin) had a heavy emphasis on "A Storm of Steel". I'm happy to see that this episode touched on the validity of Juenger's memoirs, in the sense that it is important to recognize that Juenger published 8 total editions of his memoir, meaning that Juenger certainly had a particular and evolving way he wanted to tell his experiences of the war. The English translator, Michael Hoffmann notes these differences in the translator's foreword of the English version, particularly how Juenger tempered the memoir's blood lust in later versions. Purely in my opinion after reading A Storm of Steel three times, I think it's apparent that Juenger was conflicted with trying to describe the war as it occurred, but also simultaneously injects what could now seen today as 'anti-Remarque' themes of masculinity, honour and the 'positive merits of war' (I hesitate to call these proto-fascist themes outright).
    All in all, A Storm of Steel is one of THE WWI works that anyone interested in the war should read, but I think you get the most out of it if you read it critically, and maybe while reading or having read Louis Barthas' "Poilu" for a sense of contrast. Also, this was a great biographical episode of Juenger's early life; Juenger's entire life, and the evolution of his literature and beliefs goes through such roller-coaster, that he later ended up being a fan of Arno Schmidt's work!

  • @m0ep
    @m0ep 6 років тому +10

    I read "In Stahlgewittern" a few months ago. Its a really well-written book.

  • @turmunhkganba1705
    @turmunhkganba1705 6 років тому +115

    Hello Indy and team. I have been watching since your cross over with alternate history hub and I would like to say that I love your work and efforts to spread knowledge
    Also could you do a What did Mongolia do during WW1 I can help with what I learned in school and the library if you want some Mongolian sources

    • @palandium__597
      @palandium__597 6 років тому +3

      Woud love this

    • @ieuanhunt552
      @ieuanhunt552 6 років тому +2

      Turmunhk Ganba you are more likely to get heard if you support them on Patrion. I won't begrudge if you can't afford it or don't want to it's just a suggestion.

    • @turmunhkganba1705
      @turmunhkganba1705 6 років тому +3

      Ieuan Hunt Thanks for letting me now, I don’t have much money right now. But I hope someone will be interested enough to suggest it there

    • @albertofrankdiaz6664
      @albertofrankdiaz6664 6 років тому

      Pay patreon and they will do it.

    • @x999uuu1
      @x999uuu1 6 років тому +1

      Contact them in Facebook. They respond fast

  • @unclee7206
    @unclee7206 3 місяці тому +2

    One of the most interesting books I have ever read. Everyone should read it

  • @fuzzydunlop7928
    @fuzzydunlop7928 6 років тому +11

    YOOOOOOOO I've waited the entire series for this. I think the very first comment I ever made on this channel was "will you guys do a profile on Ernst Junger?" EDIT: Oh, also - the morbid fascination with the dead and maimed as well as the sense of isolation and smallness as a toothless cog in the machine of modern war are two important themes of James Jones' work a generation later, particularly "The Thin Red Line"

  • @polstierna4251
    @polstierna4251 6 років тому +11

    FINALLY ERNST JÜNGER TIME! Thank you guys!!!

  • @jackcade68
    @jackcade68 2 роки тому +3

    I came across this title on a random video of the battle of the Somme. I looked into it and of course found Indy and his crew already having it covered. This is a must have book for not only my collection but for my own personal consumption. Looking forward to reading it this winter by the fire with a Brandy.
    Or two.

  • @arthureschwald9613
    @arthureschwald9613 6 років тому +6

    One of the best and most inspiring german writers.

  • @Gjerstad
    @Gjerstad 6 років тому +4

    I didn't find Jünger all that warmongering. I expected him to be, but honestly, for each passage that describes the "thrill of the hunt" and so forth, there is a passage that describes his courage failing or some friend being senselessly mutilated or killed out of nowhere with a cold and detailed realistic prose, that does not come away as glorifying war at all.
    We are not comfortable with the thought, that we as humans could enjoy something as horrible as war. But the truth is that we can and do, back in WWI, back in antiquity, in WWII, in Vietnam... Watch a documentary on the war in Afghanistan like 'Armadillo'.
    I thought Jünger was simply being brutally honest about all aspects of being at war as a soldier.

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому

      Which of the 8 editions of the book did you read?

    • @Gjerstad
      @Gjerstad 6 років тому

      Hmm... It says copyright 1920, 1961 Klett-Cotta on the inside. Is this one of the more "pacifist" editions?

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому

      Hard to tell: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storm_of_Steel#Publication_history

  • @laurenhulbert4410
    @laurenhulbert4410 6 років тому +1

    6:35 - 7:00 I like how you raise your voice like that. I literally got a small adrenaline rush from that.

  • @jacoblopez9374
    @jacoblopez9374 Рік тому +4

    I read his book storm of steel it was one of the best and most horrific books I’ve read

  • @12345678927164
    @12345678927164 Місяць тому +1

    I will read his account. He had a beautiful way of speaking and never withheld the truth of what happened

  • @degenerate3288
    @degenerate3288 6 років тому +143

    Ww1
    Teacher: A guy got shot and a month later 1 million people would be dead
    Me: boy that escalated quickly

    • @eldorados_lost_searcher
      @eldorados_lost_searcher 6 років тому +25

      Osiris
      It's downright criminal how the lead-up to the war, and the war itself, are glossed over in classes.

    • @peterpepa3041
      @peterpepa3041 6 років тому +3

      Garret LeBuis yea especially when compared to ww2

    • @Corey_Brandt
      @Corey_Brandt 6 років тому +6

      Garret LeBuis well you’ve got to understand how much the teachers have to cover in the school year. You can’t go over everything and have meaningful lessons, but at the same time you can’t gloss over everything and expect your students to learn. So they have to teach what is most important only. Not the extra details.

  • @NickRatnieks
    @NickRatnieks 6 років тому +3

    I seem to recall that Junger states that the greatest level of human experience ever is a couple of stormtroop units- one German and one British in action against one another. I will have to dig the book out and find it. Epic craziness from the last living holder of the Blue Max.

  • @SamuelLanghorn
    @SamuelLanghorn Рік тому +3

    I am a bit puzzled why the German title is not properly translated.
    in Stahlgewittern is:
    in thunderstorms of steel
    where thunderstorms is plural, to me more dramatic than storm of steel.

  • @mcmax571
    @mcmax571 6 років тому +1

    I read Storm of Steel last year and looked to see if The Great War had done a episode about Ernst Junger and thanks for doing this! I hope this makes people go and read this book.

  • @dude157
    @dude157 6 років тому +3

    Best personal account story from any war I have ever read.

  • @wilsongraham7048
    @wilsongraham7048 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent book on World War One, the best book I have read in some time.

  • @LukoHevia
    @LukoHevia 6 років тому +17

    I've read both Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front and Jünger's Storm of Steel, and both are amazing books. Of course, they are polar opposites as far as their take on war is, but i see that as two sides of the same coin. Although, i have to admit that Jünger's war exploits are way more impressive

  • @mrbarbelbarbello2332
    @mrbarbelbarbello2332 6 років тому +2

    I found it strange to read the of the jubilance and success of the Spring offensive before it became a road to nowhere. Very powerful description of momentum then stagnation.

  • @iamaheretic7829
    @iamaheretic7829 6 років тому +24

    Finally a who did what on Ernst Junger

  • @A_Degenerate_with_Glasses
    @A_Degenerate_with_Glasses 6 років тому +1

    I remember this book; my history professor got the entire class to read it and write a 15 page essay, totally worth it.

  • @G31GER_AOE
    @G31GER_AOE Рік тому +1

    junger and sledge wrote the two best books on the great wars imo. real gut punch with those two.

  • @Chezzers.
    @Chezzers. 6 років тому +1

    One of the best books on war ever written. Storm Of Steel and Goodbye To All That are must reads for anyone with any interest in WW1

  • @masteroftheart5548
    @masteroftheart5548 5 років тому +2

    Found a copy of "the storm of steel" in a local secondhand book store. Bought it and really looking forward to reading it when I have time. Thanks for the suggestion.

  • @thevalleyknight9205
    @thevalleyknight9205 6 років тому +7

    Honestly, as someone training and about to finish selection to join the British army, it definitely makes me think and appreciate that type of warfare is behind us.
    Anyway I love the vids Indie and crew! Keep it up!

  • @REALjohnmosesbrowning
    @REALjohnmosesbrowning 4 роки тому +4

    Jünger was a strange man, but damn if he wasn't completely badass. The man's a legend.

  • @greenjoseph4
    @greenjoseph4 6 років тому +1

    Storm of Steel was required reading for a "Soldiering through time" class I took as a grad student. I's a great read. I find "Poilu", written by Louis Barthas as the French answer to Junger.

  • @JamesYoung61
    @JamesYoung61 6 років тому +2

    I have Storm of Steel in Audiobook, it is a well written account of war first hand and shows that little changes when men go to war.

  • @Sosorasoul
    @Sosorasoul 6 років тому +1

    I really liked that video. My father gave me that book when I was twelve and really marked me about the horrors of war. But I can also recommend some books written by french soldiers. For example, Maurice Genevoix with "Ceux de 14" (Those of 1914) or Louis Ferdinand Céline "Voyage au bout de la nuit" (Journey to the end of the night). Both depicts really interesting sides of the war. And the story of those writers can be interesting to cover in one of your episodes ! Keep doing these !

  • @indianajones4321
    @indianajones4321 6 років тому +14

    Warning
    Some viewers may find the following video disturbing. Viewer discretion is advised.

  • @kaiserwilliams6833
    @kaiserwilliams6833 6 років тому +135

    Are you guys going to do a bigger segment on "anti-Remarque" literature? "Sieben vor Verdun" by Josef Magnus Wehner comes to mind.

    • @TheGreatWar
      @TheGreatWar  6 років тому +34

      probably not enough time for more this year. we rather want to cover authors that wrote about other fronts too.

    • @julianfitz806
      @julianfitz806 6 років тому

      Will you discontinue the chanel "when the war is over"? :-(

    • @andreastiefenthaler3811
      @andreastiefenthaler3811 6 років тому +4

      @julian fritz "this is only an armistice for 20 years"

    • @julianfitz806
      @julianfitz806 6 років тому

      If you want toll tell history, lurn history.

    • @gabewood983
      @gabewood983 6 років тому

      Steve Kaczynski iuhas g.
      B
      Br

  • @pauleohl
    @pauleohl 3 роки тому +1

    Glad the algorithm offered this. I was unaware of Junger.

  • @ciaranbracey1050
    @ciaranbracey1050 6 років тому +1

    This book is by far the best book I’ve read to date!

  • @smcdoug11
    @smcdoug11 6 років тому +1

    Love the show! Gonna miss you guys when its over! Do another war anniversary documentary!!!!

  • @undergroundman6602
    @undergroundman6602 6 років тому +1

    Ive read this book, it effected me in a way i did not expect. I recommend it ,their is such colour in his descriptions.

  • @zoperxplex
    @zoperxplex 6 років тому +5

    What an amazing story. He seemed to be built of steel.

  • @the_major
    @the_major 6 років тому +1

    I've waited so long and patiently for this episode after requesting it via the comments three years ago. THANK YOU GREAT WAR FOR NOT FORGETTING!
    Also, the storm is steel is an incredible book to read if you find the great war interesting.

  • @glm0142
    @glm0142 6 років тому +9

    they're making a ww1 movie about Anibal Milhais here in Portugal

    • @charliespurr7325
      @charliespurr7325 6 років тому

      Communist dogge they make movies in Portugal? They can't get box office sales of more than a couple thousand there! :p

  • @rittervontrost5680
    @rittervontrost5680 6 років тому

    Yes Yes all of my yes. Finally a special about Jünger.
    Thank you very much.
    I read Storm of Steel in more or less one sitting and the diaries as soon as they came out. Great stuff!

  • @badanimationsstudio
    @badanimationsstudio 6 років тому +2

    Do a video on Gabriele D'annunzio! Great chance to talk about the flight over Vienna and the question of Fiume.

  • @mr.rodgers3745
    @mr.rodgers3745 3 роки тому +1

    Just got done reading Storm of steel. Great book

  • @steezydan8543
    @steezydan8543 6 років тому +35

    Indy, I know this is a strange request, but I feel like all of us viewers have a secret desire to see you in period accurate uniform. Do you think it would be possible for you and the crew to get some Stahlhelms and experimental MP-18’s and reenact some trench raiding for us? As you know, seeing IS believing! As always, great episode!

  • @Zaradeptus
    @Zaradeptus Рік тому +4

    6:33 sends chills down my spine

  • @Lamelalinho
    @Lamelalinho 6 років тому +2

    Great book and a real hero. This guy had real courage

  • @gold1erik
    @gold1erik 6 років тому +2

    Amazing! I'm reading storm of steel right now, much thanks to your channel! :)