Preface
Introduction
1 The German People and Allied Demands: Pressures and Initiatives toward Reconciliation, 1944-1946
2 German Church and Political Groups
3 Steps toward Christian-Jewish Reconciliation
4 Broadening of International Contacts and Reconciliation Work
5 The Politics of Reconciliation in the Two Germanies, 1949-1954
Conclusion
Bibliography
'To Forget It All and Begin Anew provides a very well written and highly readable treatment of how a range of individuals and institutions, domestic and international, dealt with the problem of postwar reconciliation. Steven M. Schroeder's attention to how gestures could feed both reconciliation and victimization demonstrates the ambiguities of a subject too often treated categorically. His examination of agency among grassroots activists and lower-echelon institutional representatives is also significant.' -- Noel D. Cary, Department of History, College of the Holy Cross 'Exploring a fascinating and relevant topic that has not yet been investigated in-depth, To Forget It All and Begin Anew reminds us just how far contemporary Germany has travelled on the road to reconciliation. Based on research in an impressive number of libraries, private holdings, and archives, this book presents a treasure trove of sources that amplify the voices of Germans and their victims. It makes a significant contribution to scholarship on twentieth-century German and European history.' -- Maria D. Mitchell, Department of History, Franklin & Marshall College 'Steven M. Schroeder's wonderfully concise and lucid book takes on the increasingly important issue of reconciliation. His innovative study shifts the focus to hitherto neglected postwar organizations, providing a necessary counterpoint to works concentrating exclusively on the churches. Particularly noteworthy and praiseworthy are his comparisons between the Western and Soviet zones of occupation.' -- Mark Edward Ruff, Department of History, Saint Louis University
Steven M. Schroeder is a faculty member in the History Department at the University of the Fraser Valley.
‘Both researchers and students will find this book useful as a means of looking beyond the Cold War dynamic and state leaders to understand how prominent individuals, not always for the most altruistic reasons, sought to make Germans respectable again on the world stage after the horrors of Nazism.’ - Andrew Demshuk (American Historical Review vol 119:02:2014) ‘Schroeder’s research successfully introduces into the historiography the work of a number of hitherto neglected post-war institutions based on thorough archival digging, which in itself is an important contribution to the social, political and intellectual history of the period.’ - Camilo Erlichman (Reviews in History, 19 June 2014)
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