Stalin's unwanted child : the Soviet Union, the German question and the founding of the GDR
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Stalin's unwanted child : the Soviet Union, the German question and the founding of the GDR
Macmillan , St. Martin's Press, 1998
- : uk
- : us
- Other Title
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Stalins ungeliebtes Kind
Available at / 12 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: us319.3403||L9101182696
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Note
Translation of: Stalins ungeliebtes Kind
Includes bibliographical references (p. 220-228) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
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: us ISBN 9780312210281
Description
How did Germany come to be divided during the Cold War? The renowned German historian Wilfired Loth has examined the archives of the Eastern side and comes to fascinating conclusions. He demonstrates that Stalin wanted neither a separate state on the soil of the Soviet Occupation Zone nor a socialist state in Germany at all. Instead, Stalin sought a joint administration of Germany by the victorious powers, a Germany along the lines of the Weimar Republic. The socialist separate state of the GDR is primarily the product of Walter Ulbricht's revolutionary zeal, which was able to unfold in the context of the Western walling-off policy.
Table of Contents
Introduction - A Program for Germany - First Setbacks - From Paris to London - The Cominform Line - Zigzag to the Eastern State - Between Two Goals - Ulbricht's Revolution - Balance: How the GDR Came to Be - Epilogue to the English Edition - Endnotes - Abbreviations - Bibliography - Chronology - Index
- Volume
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: uk ISBN 9780333716571
Description
'An interpretation which should and must have great repercussions in the scholarly and public discussion' - Professor Jost Dulffer, Handelsblatt 'A highly-recommendable book' - Professor Hulmut Grieser, Das Historisch-Politische Buch How did Germany come to be divided during the Cold War? The renowned German historian Wilfired Loth has examined the archives of the Eastern side and comes to fascinating conclusions. He demonstrates that Stalin wanted neither a separate state on the soil of the Soviet Occupation Zone nor a socialist state in Germany at all. Instead, Stalin sought a joint administration of Germany by the victorious powers, a Germany along the lines of the Weimar Republic. The socialist separate state of the GDR is primarily the product of Walter Ulbricht's revolutionary zeal, which was able to unfold in the context of the Western walling-off policy.
Table of Contents
Introduction - A Program for Germany - First Setbacks - From Paris to London - The Cominform Line - Zigzag to the Eastern State - Between Two Goals - Ulbricht's Revolution - Balance: How the GDR Came to Be - Epilogue to the English Edition - Endnotes - Abbreviations - Bibliography - Chronology - Index
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