• Media type: Book
  • Title: Born in the GDR : living in the shadow of the wall
  • Contains: Petra : shaping the changeCarola : seeing the contradictions -- Lisa : accepting the circumstances -- Mario : feeling the regime's wrath -- Katharina : believing in God under pressure -- Robert : supporting the idea of socialism -- Mirko : rejecting the party line -- Peggy : feeling safe and secure -- Interpreting the end of East Germany.
  • Contributor: Vaizey, Hester [Author]
  • imprint: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014
  • Issue: 1. ed.
  • Extent: XIII, 224 S.; Ill., Kt
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9780198718734
  • RVK notation: MS 1204 : Deutschland (Bundesrepublik)
    NQ 6970 : Einzelbeiträge
    NQ 7315 : Einzelbeiträge
  • Keywords: Friedliche Revolution in der DDR > Jugend > Heranwachsender > Deutschland > Lebenslauf > Erinnerung > Geschichte 1961-2016
    Deutschland > Alltag > Geschichte 1980-1989
    Deutschland > Wiedervereinigung > Sozialer Wandel > Kollektives Gedächtnis
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Literaturverz. S. [207] - 217
  • Description: The changes that followed the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989 were particularly dramatic for East Germans. With the German Democratic Republic effectively taken over by West Germany in the reunification process, nothing in their lives was immune from change and upheaval: from the way they voted, the newspapers they read, to the brand of butter they bought. 0But what was it really like to go from living under communism one minute, to capitalism the next? What did the East Germans make of capitalism? And how do they remember the GDR today? Are their memories dominated by fear and loathing of the Stasi state, or do they look back with a measure of fondness and regret on a world of guaranteed employment and low living costs?

    The changes that followed the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989 were particularly dramatic for East Germans. With the German Democratic Republic effectively taken over by West Germany in the reunification process, nothing in their lives was immune from change and upheaval: from the way they voted, the newspapers they read, to the brand of butter they bought. 0But what was it really like to go from living under communism one minute, to capitalism the next? What did the East Germans make of capitalism? And how do they remember the GDR today? Are their memories dominated by fear and loathing of the Stasi state, or do they look back with a measure of fondness and regret on a world of guaranteed employment and low living costs?

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  • Shelf-mark: 2014 8 031544
  • Item ID: 34115371
  • Status: Loanable, place order
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