Himmler's breeding order: Caroline de Mulder
Caroline De Mulder's novel "La pouponnière d'Himmler" portrays the Lebensborn program of National Socialism as the horror of a thoroughly ideologized childhood: childhood is not depicted as a phase of life worthy of protection, but rather as the product of a racist breeding program—managed, measured, renamed, and robbed of its origins. The bodies of women, children, and men appear not as subjects, but as biopolitical material in the service of a totalitarian ideology. Women are depicted as "breeding machines" whose value derives solely from their reproductive capacity for the "race." Renée, a young pregnant Frenchwoman deprived of her rights in the Lebensborn home; Helga, the head nurse teetering between duty and guilt; and Marek, dehumanized as a forced laborer, embody three variations of existential vulnerability to a system that counts bodies but devalues lives. At the same time, the novel suggests that the complete subjugation of bodies is not achieved: in poetic moments of inner imagery, sensual experience, and interpersonal intimacy, possibilities of subjectivity flicker. Looking back, the novel's narrator attempts to break the silence of the past, confronting the historical void with language, imagination, and documentary fragments. The novel's polyphonic structure—between interior monologue, archival texts, and contemporary narrative—reflects the fragmentation of traumatized childhoods and makes literarily tangible what was historically meant to be erased with the end of the war on May 8, 1945.
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