List of Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction: The Banalities of East German
Historiography
Andrew Port
Part I: Memory and Identity after Nazism
Chapter 1. East Germans in a Post-Nazi State:
Communities of Experience, Connection, and Identification
Mary Fulbrook
Chapter 2. Divisive Unity: The Politics of
Cultural Nationalism during the First German Writers’ Congress of
October 1947
Andreas Agocs
Chapter 3. Communicating History: The Archived
Letters and Memories of “The Red Orchestra”
Joanne Sayner
Chapter 4. Remembered Change and Changes of
Remembrance: East German Narratives of Antifascist Conversion
Christiane Wienand
Part II: Health, Food, and Embodied Citizens
Chapter 5. Perceptions of Health after World
War II: Heart Disease and Risk Factors in East and West Germany,
1945-75
Jeannette Madarász
Chapter 6. Socialism Fights the Proletarian
Disease: East German Efforts to Overcome Tuberculosis in a Cold War
Context
Donna Harsch
Chapter 7. The Slim Imperative: Discourses and
Cultures of Dieting in the German Democratic Republic,
1949-1990
Neula Kerr-Boyle
Chapter 8. Luxury Dining in the Later Years of
the German Democratic Republic
Paul Freedman
Part III: Constraints and Conformity: Friends, Foes, and Disciplinary Practices
Chapter 9. Expectations, Predispositions, and
the Paradox of Working-Class Behavior in Nazi Germany and the
German Democratic Republic
Andrew Port
Chapter 10. Israel as Friend and Foe: Shaping
East German Society through Freund- and Feindbilder
David Tompkins
Chapter 11. Humiliation as a Weapon within the
Party: Fictional and Personal Accounts
Phil Leask
Chapter 12. Playing the Game: Football and
Everyday Life in the Honecker Era
Alan McDougall
Afterword: Structures and Subjectivities in GDR
History
Mary Fulbrook
List of Contributors
Mary Fulbrook, FBA, is Professor of German History at University College London. Her most recent books are A Small Town near Auschwitz: Ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust (2012) and Dissonant Lives: Generations and Violence through the German Dictatorships (2011). She is currently directing an AHRC-funded collaborative project on Reverberations of War in Germany and Europe: Communities of Experience and Identification since 1945. A former Chair of the German History Society, and Chair of the Modern History Section of the British Academy, she has written widely on the GDR.
“Moving beyond debates concerning totalitarianism, the 12 authors analyze the characteristics of daily life in the GDR. As a result, the subjects of the essays are sometimes surprising--dieting habits, the battle against tuberculosis, and luxury dining, for example—which only adds to the collection’s contribution to the historiography of its subject… the authors succeed in their goal of moving beyond the gray exteriors and drab lives that are often associated with life in East Germany. This alone makes the book a valuable addition to the scholarly literature.” · Choice “This book is an excellent example of the effectiveness of an edited collection’s ability to convey a broad array of subjects that help reinforce the central theoretical premises of the work. [The] coeditors…have made excellent choices in almost all of the essays and displayed a clear vision of the major debates or historiographical controversies to which this collection could best contribute. As such, this collection is a model for future authors to follow and is highly recommended for both academic and interested general audiences alike.” · History: Reviews of New Books “Which influences and earlier experiences determined the coming-into-being of East Germans after 1945? These are the questions addressed in this edited volume by Mary Fulbrook and Andrew Port, two researchers whose recent work has significantly inspired GDR studies... What is especially attractive is that a number of essays look at the often neglected interdependency between the two German states, their common historical roots and traditions... This not only draws attention to general developments on both sides of the Iron Curtain, but also calls into question conventional periodization.” · Sehepunkte “Mary Fulbrook and Andrew I. Port have brought together essays on an array of topics that together serve as a very useful barometer of the state of the field of historiography on East Germany… original, incisive, and persuasive… Taken as a whole, the essays highlight historians’ growing recognition of the importance of the pre-1945 past in understanding the German Democratic Republic’s (GDR) history and their willingness to situate East German developments in a larger, comparative framework. As is so powerfully demonstrated here, analyses of East Germans’ perceptions, attitudes, and predispositions can shed much light on such fundamental issues… [T]he volume represents a substantial contribution to the scholarship on East Germany." · American Historical Review “This is an excellent edited collection. It provides a range of methodological approaches and is right up to date: it introduces a number of new academics onto the scene while also providing some old favorites. The volume significantly adds to our understanding of East Germany and its population. It provides a reassessment of antifascism and memory... Port’s introduction and Fulbrook’s chapter on memory are masterful.” · Mark Fenemore, Manchester Metropolitan University “By focusing less on politics in the narrower sense of the word, and more on changing discourses on the one hand and the agency of ordinary East Germans on the other, the volume provides us with exciting and innovative new sources and results as well as important questions for future research.” · Dorothee Wierling, Forschungsstelle für Zeitgeschichte, Hamburg
Ask a Question About this Product More... |