ISBN:
0511063687
,
9780511063688
,
0511057350
,
9780511057359
,
0511119631
,
9780511119637
,
9781139052344
,
1139052349
Sprache:
Englisch
Seiten:
Online Ressource (xi, 363 p.)
,
ill.
Ausgabe:
Online-Ausg.
Serie:
Publications of the German Historical Institute
Paralleltitel:
Print version Life after death
DDC:
303.40940904
Schlagwort(e):
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
;
Social change History
;
20th century
;
Europe
;
Social change History
;
20th century
;
Germany (West)
;
Social conflict History
;
20th century
;
Europe
;
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Psychological aspects
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951) Europe
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951) Germany (West)
;
Changement social Histoire
;
20e siècle
;
Europe
;
Changement social Histoire
;
20e siècle
;
Allemagne (Ouest)
;
Conflits sociaux Histoire
;
20e siècle
;
Europe
;
Holocauste, 1939-1945 Aspect psychologique
;
Reconstruction, 1939-1951 Europe
;
Reconstruction, 1939-1951 Allemagne (Ouest)
;
Social change History 20th century
;
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Psychological aspects
;
Social conflict History 20th century
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951)
;
Social change History 20th century
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951)
;
Social change History 20th century
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951)
;
Social change History 20th century
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951)
;
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Psychological aspects
;
Social conflict History 20th century
;
Psychological aspects
;
Social change
;
Social conditions
;
SOCIAL SCIENCE ; General
;
Reconstruction (1939-1951)
;
Social conflict
;
History
;
Ethnic relations
;
Europe Social conditions
;
20th century
;
Germany Social conditions
;
20th century
;
Europe Ethnic relations
;
Germany (West) Ethnic relations
;
Europe Relations interethniques
;
Europe Conditions sociales
;
20e siècle
;
Allemagne Conditions sociales
;
20e siècle
;
Allemagne (Ouest) Relations interethniques
;
Europe
;
Germany
;
Germany (West)
;
Europe Ethnic relations
;
Germany (West) Ethnic relations
;
Europe Social conditions 20th century
;
Germany Social conditions 20th century
;
Germany Social conditions 20th century
;
Europe Ethnic relations
;
Europe Social conditions 20th century
;
Germany (West) Ethnic relations
;
Europe
;
Germany
;
Germany (West)
;
Electronic books
;
Electronic books History
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Konferenzschrift 1998
Kurzfassung:
Introduction:Violence, normality, and the construction of postwar Europe /Richard Bessel,Dirk Schumann --Post-traumatic stress disorder and World War II: can a psychiatric concept help us understand postwar society? /Alice Förster,Birgit Beck --Between pain and silence: remembering the victims of violence in Germany after 1949 /Sabine Behrenbeck --Paths of normalization after the persecution of the Jews: the Netherlands, France and West Germany in the 1950s /Ido de Haan --Trauma, memory, and motherhood: Germans and Jewish displaced persons in post-Nazi Germany, 1945-1949 /Atina Grossmann --Memory and the narrative of rape in Budapest and Vienna in 1945 /Andrea Petö --"Going home": the personal adjustment of British and American servicemen after the war /Joanna Bourke --Desperately seeking normality: sex and marriage in the wake of the war /Dagmar Herzog --Family life and "normality" in postwar British culture /Pat Thane --Continuities and discontinuities of consumer mentality in West Germany in the 1950s /Michael Wildt --"Strengthened and purified through ordeal by fire": ecclesiastical triumphalism in the ruins of Europe /Damion Van Melis --The nationalization of victimhood: selective violence and national grief in western Europe, 1940-1960 /Pieter Lagrou --Italy after fascism: the predicament of dominant narratives /Donald Sassoon --The politics of post-fascist aesthetics: 1950s West and East German industrial design /Paul Betts --Dissonance, normality, and the historical method: why did some Germans think of tourism after May 8, 1945? /Alon Confino.
Kurzfassung:
This collection of essays offers a novel approach to the cultural and social history of Europe after the Second World War. In a shift of perspective, it does not conceive of the impressive economic and political stability of the postwar era as a quasi-natural return to previous patterns of societal development but approaches it as an attempt to establish 'normality' upon the lingering memories of experiencing violence on a hitherto unprecedented scale. It views the relationship of the violence of the 1940s to the apparent 'normality' and stability of the 1950s as a key to understanding the history of post-war Europe. While the history of post-war Germany naturally looms large in this collection, the essays deal with countries across Western and Central Europe, offer comparative perspectives on their subjects, and draw upon a wide range of primary and secondary source material
Anmerkung:
Includes bibliographical references and index. - Description based on print version record
,
Introduction:Violence, normality, and the construction of postwar Europe
,
Post-traumatic stress disorder and World War II: can a psychiatric concept help us understand postwar society?
,
Between pain and silence: remembering the victims of violence in Germany after 1949
,
Paths of normalization after the persecution of the Jews: the Netherlands, France and West Germany in the 1950s
,
Trauma, memory, and motherhood: Germans and Jewish displaced persons in post-Nazi Germany, 1945-1949
,
Memory and the narrative of rape in Budapest and Vienna in 1945
,
"Going home": the personal adjustment of British and American servicemen after the war
,
Desperately seeking normality: sex and marriage in the wake of the war
,
Family life and "normality" in postwar British culture
,
Continuities and discontinuities of consumer mentality in West Germany in the 1950s
,
"Strengthened and purified through ordeal by fire": ecclesiastical triumphalism in the ruins of Europe
,
The nationalization of victimhood: selective violence and national grief in western Europe, 1940-1960
,
Italy after fascism: the predicament of dominant narratives
,
The politics of post-fascist aesthetics: 1950s West and East German industrial design
,
Dissonance, normality, and the historical method: why did some Germans think of tourism after May 8, 1945?
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
URL:
Volltext
(lizenzpflichtig)
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139052344
URL:
Volltext
(lizenzpflichtig)
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