Adolf Hitler had sex with Eva Braun without touching her and after first "fortifying his underpants with clean serviettes and napkins", according to the imagination of Martin Amis. In a discussion about Hitler's sexuality - or lack of it - Amis described a sex scene between the Nazi leader and his companion. The author believes Hitler was asexual and obsessive about hygiene, and that he would achieve climax by looking at Braun rather than touching her.
"I would hazard this is how it went with Hitler and Eva," Amis said. "He would fortify his underpants with clean serviettes and napkins. Then he would go into some sort of excitation with Eva Braun staying a safe distance. "There would be bourgeois perversion because he was the bourgeois anti-Christ - don't forget the bourgeois in him. I imagine Eva would stand a distance away and lift her skirt. Then there would be some sort of soggy climax on Hitler's part and that would be that."
Amis's latest novel, The Zone of Interest, is set during the Holocaust. Speaking at Cheltenham Literature Festival, he said historians had failed to understand Hitler's motives because they knew nothing of his sex life. "No-one understands Hitler. No-one understands what he was up to. And I don't want to be reductive here or simplistic or frivolous, but I'm convinced that one of the reasons why we don't recognise Hitler is that he's sexually a void," he said.
Martin Amis's latest novel, The Zone of Interest, is set during the Holocaust (Rex) "Sexuality is one of the ways we recognise each other: knowing whether someone is married or gay or whatever it might be. "In Hitler studies there are three schools of thought about his sexuality. "One is normality, which I think you can boot out for consideration immediately. Can you see Eva Braun relishing a post-coital cigarette? Can you imagine Hitler's tender foreplay, him being a considerate and energetic lover? No, you can't begin to imagine. So I would say normality is out.
"Asexuality is the other one, the third one is perversion... There are no real clues about his sexuality except that he wouldn't take his clothes off even for his physician and he was also fanatical about cleanliness, which suggests to be asexuality plus."
SOURCE : http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
By Anita Singh, Arts and Entertainment Editor
"I would hazard this is how it went with Hitler and Eva," Amis said. "He would fortify his underpants with clean serviettes and napkins. Then he would go into some sort of excitation with Eva Braun staying a safe distance. "There would be bourgeois perversion because he was the bourgeois anti-Christ - don't forget the bourgeois in him. I imagine Eva would stand a distance away and lift her skirt. Then there would be some sort of soggy climax on Hitler's part and that would be that."
Amis's latest novel, The Zone of Interest, is set during the Holocaust. Speaking at Cheltenham Literature Festival, he said historians had failed to understand Hitler's motives because they knew nothing of his sex life. "No-one understands Hitler. No-one understands what he was up to. And I don't want to be reductive here or simplistic or frivolous, but I'm convinced that one of the reasons why we don't recognise Hitler is that he's sexually a void," he said.
Martin Amis's latest novel, The Zone of Interest, is set during the Holocaust (Rex) "Sexuality is one of the ways we recognise each other: knowing whether someone is married or gay or whatever it might be. "In Hitler studies there are three schools of thought about his sexuality. "One is normality, which I think you can boot out for consideration immediately. Can you see Eva Braun relishing a post-coital cigarette? Can you imagine Hitler's tender foreplay, him being a considerate and energetic lover? No, you can't begin to imagine. So I would say normality is out.
"Asexuality is the other one, the third one is perversion... There are no real clues about his sexuality except that he wouldn't take his clothes off even for his physician and he was also fanatical about cleanliness, which suggests to be asexuality plus."
By Anita Singh, Arts and Entertainment Editor
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