Socialist Reformers and the Collapse of the German Democratic Republic

Author(s)

    • Orlow, Dietrich

Bibliographic Information

Socialist Reformers and the Collapse of the German Democratic Republic

Dietrich Orlow

(Palgrave pivot)

Palgrave Macmillan, 2015

  • hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Socialist Reformers and the Collapse of the German Democratic Republic explores a neglected aspect of the collapse of Communism in the former East Germany. It focuses on the East Germans' enthusiastic support for re-unification and the transfer of West Germany's political and economic institutions to the East, ignoring those in the German Democratic Republic who wanted to 'reform' socialism within, not destroy it. Their aim was to preserve an independent German Democratic Republic that would pursue an alternative 'third way' between Western capitalism and Stalinist repression. Their vision was a 'better, more beautiful' socialism instead of the 'push and shove society' that they associated with Western capitalism. In their view the 'better, more beautiful' socialism would combine the Western ideals of individual freedom with Marxist concept of collective decision-making and shared wealth. The reformers failed, of course, but their ideas and activities in the fall of 1989 are an essential part of the story that led to present-day Germany.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. The SED Reformers 3. The HRO Reformers 4. The Illusions of the Hardliners 5. The First Group of SED Reformers Takes Charge 6. A New Group of SED Reformers Tries Its Luck 7. The Round Table: The HRO Reformers' Fifteen Minutes of Fame 8. Conclusion

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