Why They Gave

Titel: Why They Gave : CARE and American Aid for Germany after 1945 / Maximilian Klose
Verfasser:
Veröffentlicht: Stuttgart, Germany : Franz Steiner Verlag, 2024
Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (270 p.)
Format: E-Book
Sprache: Englisch
Schlagworte:
ISBN: 9783515136563
Buchumschlag
X
alg: 53026309
001A    $06055:04-06-25 
001B    $01999:08-06-25 $t16:09:35.000 
001D    $06055:04-06-25 
001U    $0utf8 
001X    $00 
002@    $0Oax 
002C    $aText $btxt $2rdacontent 
002D    $aComputermedien $bc $2rdamedia 
002E    $aOnline-Ressource $bcr $2rdacarrier 
003@    $0530263092 
004A    $A978-3-515-13656-3 
007A    $0530263092 $aHEB 
007I    $0openresearch-d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa 
009Q    $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $xH 
010@    $aeng 
011@    $a2024 
013D    $RWissenschaftliche Literatur $#Dissertations, Academic $#Thèses et écrits académiques $74113937-9 $8Hochschulschrift [Ts1] $9085338818 
017B    $aZDB-119-KNU 
017B    $aZDB-119-ORL 
021A    $aWhy They Gave $dCARE and American Aid for Germany after 1945 $hMaximilian Klose 
028A    $aKlose $BVerfasser $dMaximilian $4aut 
033A    $pStuttgart, Germany $nFranz Steiner Verlag 
033E    $p[Berlin] $nBiblioLabs 
034D    $a1 Online-Ressource (270 p.) 
037J    $aOpen Access $2star $uhttp://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 $fUnrestricted online access 
044K    $#Berlin (Germany) History Blockade, 1948-1949 $#Berlin (Allemagne) 1948-1949 (Blocus) $#Luftbrücke $74168233-6 $8Luftbrücke [Ts1] $908576289X 
045E    $c360 $c943 
047A    $aSacherschließung maschinell aus paralleler Ausg. übernommen 
047I    $aWhat motivates people to give to those in need? How do their actions reflect the historical moment in which they occur? Founded in 1945, the Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe (CARE) allowed U.S. citizens to send humanitarian aid to friends, family, and strangers overseas. Germany was the most popular destination for CARE packages, with numbers exceeding those of all other European destinations combined.  Maximilian Klose examines why Americans were more likely to give aid to their recently defeated enemies than to their allies or to the victims of Nazi aggression. Embedding a diverse selection of case studies in the social, cultural, and political debates of the early postwar era, the study finds that these acts of giving were much more than altruistic deeds. In fact, donors used humanitarianism for their own purposes. Some gave to people who reflected their own worldview and sense of importance, or who could strategically advance their power on either side of the Atlantic. Others supported causes they considered essential to the progress of German-American relations in the early Cold War. In all cases, humanitarianism was at least as much about the donor as it was about the recipient. 

lok: 53026309 3

exp: 53026309 3 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.722 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234499 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 5

exp: 53026309 5 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.726 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234502 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 8

exp: 53026309 8 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.729 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234510 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 10

exp: 53026309 10 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.732 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234529 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 11

exp: 53026309 11 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.020 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966817 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 13

exp: 53026309 13 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.024 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966825 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 20

exp: 53026309 20 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.026 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966833 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 21

exp: 53026309 21 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.735 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234537 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 23

exp: 53026309 23 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.740 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234545 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 24

exp: 53026309 24 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.029 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966841 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 25

exp: 53026309 25 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.742 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234553 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 36

exp: 53026309 36 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.031 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $0130696685X 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 49

exp: 53026309 49 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.034 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966868 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 51

exp: 53026309 51 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.036 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966876 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 54

exp: 53026309 54 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.039 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966884 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 59

exp: 53026309 59 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.041 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966892 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 69

exp: 53026309 69 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.044 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966906 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 74

exp: 53026309 74 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.046 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966914 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 75

exp: 53026309 75 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.048 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966922 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 76

exp: 53026309 76 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.051 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966930 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 107

exp: 53026309 107 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.053 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966949 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 108

exp: 53026309 108 1 #EPN
201B/01 $008-06-25 $t16:09:35.056 
201C/01 $008-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01306966957 
208@/01 $a08-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 204

exp: 53026309 204 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.746 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $01305234561 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH 

lok: 53026309 205

exp: 53026309 205 1 #EPN
201B/01 $005-06-25 $t02:11:21.749 
201C/01 $005-06-25 
201U/01 $0utf8 
203@/01 $0130523457X 
208@/01 $a05-06-25 $bl 
209S/01 $S0 $uhttps://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa $XH
LEADER 00000cam a22000002c 4500
001 530263092
003 DE-603
005 20250608160935.0
007 cr||||||||||||
008 250604s2024 xx |||| om u00||u|eng c
020 |a 9783515136563 
035 |a (DE-599)HEB530263092 
040 |a DE-603  |b ger  |c DE-603  |d DE-603 
041 |a eng 
084 |a 360  |a 943  |q DE-101  |2 sdnb 
100 1 |a Klose, Maximilian  |e Verfasser  |4 aut 
245 0 0 |a Why They Gave  |b CARE and American Aid for Germany after 1945  |c Maximilian Klose 
264 1 |a Stuttgart, Germany  |b Franz Steiner Verlag  |c 2024 
264 2 |a [Berlin]  |b BiblioLabs 
300 |a 1 Online-Ressource (270 p.) 
336 |a Text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a Computermedien  |b c  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a Online-Ressource  |b cr  |2 rdacarrier 
520 |a What motivates people to give to those in need? How do their actions reflect the historical moment in which they occur? Founded in 1945, the Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe (CARE) allowed U.S. citizens to send humanitarian aid to friends, family, and strangers overseas. Germany was the most popular destination for CARE packages, with numbers exceeding those of all other European destinations combined. Maximilian Klose examines why Americans were more likely to give aid to their recently defeated enemies than to their allies or to the victims of Nazi aggression. Embedding a diverse selection of case studies in the social, cultural, and political debates of the early postwar era, the study finds that these acts of giving were much more than altruistic deeds. In fact, donors used humanitarianism for their own purposes. Some gave to people who reflected their own worldview and sense of importance, or who could strategically advance their power on either side of the Atlantic. Others supported causes they considered essential to the progress of German-American relations in the early Cold War. In all cases, humanitarianism was at least as much about the donor as it was about the recipient. 
650 7 |a Luftbrücke  |0 (DE-588)4168233-6  |0 (DE-603)08576289X  |2 gnd 
655 7 |a Hochschulschrift  |2 gnd-content  |0 (DE-588)4113937-9  |0 (DE-603)085338818 
856 |u https://openresearchlibrary.org/content/d6dc6d96-9f6d-4966-826b-c6d2f13381fa  |x Verlag  |z kostenfrei 
912 |a ZDB-119-KNU 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234499  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234502  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234510  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234529  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966817  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966825  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966833  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234537  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234545  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966841  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234553  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)130696685X  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966868  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966876  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966884  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966892  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966906  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966914  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966922  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966930  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966949  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1306966957  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)1305234561  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d 
924 1 |9 603  |a (DE-603)130523457X  |b DE-603  |c HES  |d d