From Stasiland to Ostalgie
The GDR Twenty Years After

Edited by Karen Leeder

Oxford German Studies 38.3

Modern Humanities Research Association and Maney Publishing

20 December 2009  •  112pp


Contents:

234-235

Preface
Timothy Garton Ash

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236-241

Introduction
Karen Leeder

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242-253

Cultural Memory East v. West: Is What Belongs Together Really Growing Together?
Wolfgang Emmerich

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254-264

‘In that dawn...’: Revisiting the Wende
T. J. Reed

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265-277

Conceptualizing the GDR — 20 Years After
Katrin Kohl

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278-287

‘Die unheimliche Heimat’: The GDR and the Dialectics of Home
Peter Thompson

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288-298

The Privatization of Community: The Legacy of Collectivism in the Post-Socialist Literature of Eastern Germany
Georgina Paul

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299-309

‘Berlin ist bekannt [...] für die Mauer, die es aber nicht mehr gibt’: The Persistence of East Berlin in the Contemporary City
Lyn Marven

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310-320

‘Wenn man im Falle Weimars vom “Osten” sprechen darf’: Memory and Place in the New Bundesländer
Chloe Paver

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321-333

Remembering the Stasi in a Fairy Tale of Redemption: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s Das Leben der Anderen
Daniela Berghahn

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334-344

Just another Vergangenheitsbewältigung? The Process of Coming to Terms with the East German Past Revisited
Jan-Werner Müller

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Bibliography entry:

Leeder, Karen (ed.), From Stasiland to Ostalgie: The GDR Twenty Years After (= Oxford German Studies, 38.3 (2009))

First footnote reference: 35 From Stasiland to Ostalgie: The GDR Twenty Years After, ed. by Karen Leeder (= Oxford German Studies, 38.3 (2009)), p. 21.

Subsequent footnote reference: 37 Leeder, p. 47.

(To see how these citations were worked out, follow this link.)

Bibliography entry:

Leeder, Karen (ed.). 2009. From Stasiland to Ostalgie: The GDR Twenty Years After (= Oxford German Studies, 38.3)

Example citation: ‘A quotation occurring on page 21 of this work’ (Leeder 2009: 21).

Example footnote reference: 35 Leeder 2009: 21.

(To see how these citations were worked out, follow this link.)


This title was first published by Modern Humanities Research Association and Maney Publishing but rights to it are now held by Taylor & Francis.


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