The divided past : rewriting post-war German history

Bibliographic Information

The divided past : rewriting post-war German history

edited by Christoph Klessmann

(German historical perspectives, 15)

Berg, 2001

  • : cloth

Available at  / 14 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book tackles head on the central problems of writing German post-war history in the aftermath of unification. Since 1990, historians have been debating whether the development of the Federal Republic and the East German State constituted separate histories or whether they share what should be considered a joint past. This book addresses the specific forms of segregation and interconnectedness between the 'twoGermanies' and acknowledges the asymmetry of the relationship, as well as the effect that this had on the internal and external policies of both sides. This is a book that confronts the need for historiography to break away from the traditional master narrative. It offers an alternative in the form of the differing points of view necessary to gain a new perspective on the central problem of a separate, yet joint, German post-war history. Drawing on both methodological and historiographicalapproaches, authors tackle this vexed problem in the context of generational and woman's history, secularization, the labour movement, and the legitimization of the "workers' state", and culminate by addressing the perennial question: how does a nation live with catastrophe? 'Includes both programmatic statements and examples of work from a German national perspective ...For Klessmann, although the two states were separate entities, their histories were nonetheless inextricably interconnected. He believes that by exploring the influence of each German state on the other, much can be learned about the postwar Germanies ...According to Klessmann,the West was present in the East in a variety of ways, but perhaps most importantly as "an image transmitted via the media and relatives that served as a constant point of reference for East Germans judging their standard of living".'Journal of Modern History, Volume 75, Number 3, September 2003

Table of Contents

Editorial Preface Gerhard A. Ritter and Anthony Nicholls Introduction Christoph Klessmann, University of Potsdam Workers in the Workers' State: German Traditions, the Soviet Model and the Magnetic Attraction of West Germany Christoph Klessmann, Centre for Research in Contemporary History, Potsdam Everyday History: New Approaches to the History of the Post-War Germanies Thomas Lindenberger, Centre for Research in Contemporary History, Potsdam Confrontation and Cooperation: Relations Between Two German Historiographies Martin Sabrow, Centre for Research in Contemporary History, Potsdam Anti-Semitism and Philosemitism in the Divided Germany Wolfgang Benz, Technical University, Berlin. Secularisation in Germany after 1945 Detlef Pollack, Europa University, Viadrina Frankfurt/Oder Generations and Generational Conflicts in East and West Germany Dorothea Wierling, University of Erfurt Sex and Gender in the Divided Germany: Approaches to History from a Cultural Point of View Ina Merkel, University of Marburg Mending Broken Memories Konrad H. Jarausch, University of Potsdam

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Details

  • NCID
    BA55631591
  • ISBN
    • 1859735118
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Oxford
  • Pages/Volumes
    vii, 200 p.
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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