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Divided Memory

The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys

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What has Germany made of its Nazi past? This significant examination reveals how the legacy of the Nazi regime has been shaped by historical beliefs and political interests in both East and West Germany. It explores the remembrance of Nazism's crimes, from the anti-Nazi emigration of the 1930s to the establishment of a day of remembrance for victims in 1996. Jeffrey Herf questions why German politicians invoke the Holocaust despite the support for its authors in Nazi Germany. He investigates the contrasting public memories of Nazi anti-Jewish persecution: how it emerged, albeit selectively, in West Germany while being repressed in "anti-fascist" East Germany. The book highlights how the politics of left and right influenced these divergent memories, revealing the relationship between public recollections of Nazism's crimes and the evolution of a Communist dictatorship in the East versus a liberal democracy in the West. Herf points to the Cold War's impact on public memory, examining the roles of prominent figures from both Germanys. By analyzing both West German and newly accessible East German archives, this work significantly contributes to understanding how Germany's recent past is remembered, framed within the ideologies and experiences of pre-1945 history and the shifting international alliances from World War II to the Cold War.

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Divided Memory, Jeffrey Herf

Langue
Année de publication
1997
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(souple),
État du livre
Bon
Prix
7,49 €

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Titre
Divided Memory
Sous-titre
The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys
Langue
Anglais
Publié
1997
Format
souple
Pages
558
ISBN10
0674213041
ISBN13
9780674213043
Séries
Titre original
Divided memory
Description
What has Germany made of its Nazi past? This significant examination reveals how the legacy of the Nazi regime has been shaped by historical beliefs and political interests in both East and West Germany. It explores the remembrance of Nazism's crimes, from the anti-Nazi emigration of the 1930s to the establishment of a day of remembrance for victims in 1996. Jeffrey Herf questions why German politicians invoke the Holocaust despite the support for its authors in Nazi Germany. He investigates the contrasting public memories of Nazi anti-Jewish persecution: how it emerged, albeit selectively, in West Germany while being repressed in "anti-fascist" East Germany. The book highlights how the politics of left and right influenced these divergent memories, revealing the relationship between public recollections of Nazism's crimes and the evolution of a Communist dictatorship in the East versus a liberal democracy in the West. Herf points to the Cold War's impact on public memory, examining the roles of prominent figures from both Germanys. By analyzing both West German and newly accessible East German archives, this work significantly contributes to understanding how Germany's recent past is remembered, framed within the ideologies and experiences of pre-1945 history and the shifting international alliances from World War II to the Cold War.