Memorialization in Germany since 1945
Titel: | Memorialization in Germany since 1945 / ed. by Bill Niven ... |
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Beteiligt: | |
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Veröffentlicht: | Basingstoke, Hampshire : Palgrave Macmillan, 2010 |
Umfang: | XV, 421 Seiten : Illustrationen ; 24 cm |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
RVK-Notation: |
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ISBN: | 0230207030 ; 9780230207035 |
Hinweise zum Inhalt: |
Inhaltsverzeichnis
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- List of Illustrations
- p. ix
- Notes on Contributors
- p. xi
- Introduction
- p. 1
- Section 1
- Remembering German Losses
- 1.1
- The Volkstrauertag (People's Day of Mourning) from 1922 to the Present
- p. 15
- 1.2
- Beyond Usable Pasts: Rethinking the Memorialization of the Strategic Air War in Germany, 1940 to 1965
- p. 26
- 1.3
- Roads to Revision: Disputes over Street Names Referring to the German Eastern Territories after the First and Second World Wars in the Cities of Dresden and Mainz, 1921 to 1972
- p. 37
- 1.4
- Monuments and Commemorative Sites for German Expellees
- p. 48
- 1.5
- A Memorial Laissez-Passer? Church Exhibitions and National Victimhood in Germany
- p. 58
- 1.6
- Remembering on Foreign Soil: The Activities of the German War Graves Commission
- p. 69
- 1.7
- Neither Here nor There? Memorialization of the Expulsion of Ethnic Germans
- p. 78
- Section 2
- Remembering Nazi Crimes, Perpetrators, and Victims
- 2.1
- The Mediators: Memorialization Endeavours of the Regional Offices for Political Education (Landeszentralen für politische Bildung)
- p. 91
- 2.2
- Memorialization of Perpetrator Sites in Bavaria
- p. 103
- 2.3
- Pieces of the Past: Souvenirs from Nazi Sites - The Example of Peenemünde
- p. 114
- 2.4
- Remembering Euthanasia: Grafeneck in the Past, Present, and Future
- p. 124
- 2.5
- Remembering Prisoners of War as Victims of National Socialist Persecution and Murder in Post-War Germany
- p. 134
- 2.6
- (In)Visible Trauma: Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset's Memorial to the Homosexuals Persecuted under the National Socialist Regime
- p. 146
- 2.7
- Memorializing the White Rose Resistance Group in Post-War Germany
- p. 157
- 2.8
- The Role of German Perpetrator Sites in Teaching and Confronting the Nazi Past
- p. 168
- Section 3
- Remembering Jewish Suffering
- 3.1
- Memorialization through Documentation: Holocaust Commemoration among Jewish Displaced Persons in Allied-Occupied Germany
- p. 181
- 3.2
- Memorializing Persecuted Jews in Dachau and Other West German Concentration Camp Memorial Sites
- p. 192
- 3.3
- Remembering Nazi Anti-Semitism in the GDR
- p. 205
- 3.4
- Rosenstraße: A Complex Site of German-Jewish Memory
- p. 214
- 3.5
- The Counter-Monument: Memory Shaped by Male Post-War Legacies
- p. 224
- 3.6
- Stumbling Blocks: A Decentralized Memorial to Holocaust Victims
- p. 233
- 3.7
- Affective Memory, Ineffective Functionality: Experiencing Berlin's Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe
- p. 243
- 3.8
- From Monuments to Installations: Aspects of Memorialization in Historical Exhibitions about the National Socialist Era
- p. 253
- Section 4
- Socialist Memory and Memory of Socialism
- 4.1
- Heroes and Victims: The Aesthetics and Ideology of Monuments and Memorials in the GDR
- p. 267
- 4.2
- Beating Nazis and Exporting Socialism: Representing East German War Memory to Foreign Tourists
- p. 276
- 4.3
- Memorializing Socialist Contradictions: A 'Think-Mark' for Rosa Luxemburg in the New Berlin
- p. 287
- 4.4
- Challenging or Concretizing Cold War Narratives? Berlin's Memorial to the Victims of 17 June 1953
- p. 298
- 4.5
- GDR Monuments in Unified Germany
- p. 308
- 4.6
- Memorialization of the German-German Border in the Context of Constructions of Heimat
- p. 318
- 4.7
- The Fight in the Prison Car Park: Memorializing Germany's 'Double Past' in Torgau since 1990
- p. 328
- Section 5
- Memorializing Germany's Ambivalent Legacies
- 5.1
- Martin Luther - Rebel, Genius, Liberator: Politics and Marketing 1517-2017
- p. 341
- 5.2
- Building Up and Tearing Down the Myth of German Colonialism: Colonial Denkmale and Mahnmale after 1945
- p. 351
- 5.3
- Remembering the Battle of Jutland in Post-War Wilhelmshaven
- p. 360
- 5.4
- The Memoralization of 9 November 1918 in the Two German States
- p. 369
- 5.5
- A Democratic Legacy? The Memorialization of the Weimar Republic and the Politics of History of the Federal Republic of Germany
- p. 379
- 5.6
- Memorializing the Military: Traditions, Exhibitions, and Monuments in the West German Army from the l950s to the Present
- p. 388
- 5.7
- The Legacy of Second German Empire Memorials after 1945
- p. 399
- Index
- p. 409