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Author Major, Patrick.
Title Behind the Berlin Wall : East Germany and the frontiers of power / Patrick Major.
Publication Info Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2011.



Descript xii, 321 p. : ill., map
Note Originally published: 2010.
Contents 1. Introduction; PART I: BEFORE THE WALL 1945-61; 2. East Germany's Dual Crisis: Politics and Economics on the Eve of the Wall; 3. Crossing the Line: Republikflucht between Defection and Migration; 4. Holding the Line: Policing the Open Border; PART II: BEHIND THE WALL 1961-89; 5. Walled In: 13 August 1961; 6. In the Shadow of the Wall; 7. Wanderlust: Travel, Emigration and the Movement; PART III: BEYOND THE WALL; 8. The Fall of the Wall: 9 November 1989; 9. Seeking Closure: Remembering the Wall
Note On the 13th of August 1961, 18,000,000 East Germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the Cold War: the Berlin Wall. Patrick Major explores how the border closure affected ordinary East Germans, from workers and farmers to teenagers and even party members. Few historical changes occur literally overnight, but on 13 August 1961 eighteen million East Germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the Cold War: the Berlin Wall.This new history rejects traditional, top-down approaches to Cold War politics, exploring instead how the border closure affected ordinary East Germans, from workers and farmers to teenagers and even party members, 'caught out' by Sunday the Thirteenth. Party, police, and Stasi reports reveal why one in six East Germans fled the country during the 1950s, undermining communist rule and forcing the eleventh-hour decision by Khrushchev and Ulbricht to build a wall along the Cold War's frontline. Did East Germans resist or come to terms with immurement? Did the communist regime become more or less dictatorial within the confines of the so-called 'Antifascist Defence Rampart'? Using film and literature, but also the GDR's losing battle against Beatlemania, Patrick Major's cross-disciplinary study suggests that popular culture both reinforced and undermined the closed society. Linking external and internal developments, Major argues that the GDR's official quest for internationalrecognition, culminating in Ostpolitik and United Nations membership in the early 1970s, became its undoing, unleashing a human rights movement which fed into, but then broke with, the protests of 1989. After exploring the reasons for the fall of the Wall and reconstructing the heady days of the autumnrevolution, the author reflects on the fate of the Wall after 1989, as it moved from demolition into the realm of memory.
200 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9780191608247 (e-book)
9780199605101 (pbk.)
Click on the terms below to find similar items in the catalogue
Author Major, Patrick.
Subject Berlin Wall, Berlin, Germany, 1961-1989.
Germany (East) -- Politics and government.
Germany (East) -- History.
Germany (East) -- Social conditions.
Descript xii, 321 p. : ill., map
Note Originally published: 2010.
Contents 1. Introduction; PART I: BEFORE THE WALL 1945-61; 2. East Germany's Dual Crisis: Politics and Economics on the Eve of the Wall; 3. Crossing the Line: Republikflucht between Defection and Migration; 4. Holding the Line: Policing the Open Border; PART II: BEHIND THE WALL 1961-89; 5. Walled In: 13 August 1961; 6. In the Shadow of the Wall; 7. Wanderlust: Travel, Emigration and the Movement; PART III: BEYOND THE WALL; 8. The Fall of the Wall: 9 November 1989; 9. Seeking Closure: Remembering the Wall
Note On the 13th of August 1961, 18,000,000 East Germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the Cold War: the Berlin Wall. Patrick Major explores how the border closure affected ordinary East Germans, from workers and farmers to teenagers and even party members. Few historical changes occur literally overnight, but on 13 August 1961 eighteen million East Germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the Cold War: the Berlin Wall.This new history rejects traditional, top-down approaches to Cold War politics, exploring instead how the border closure affected ordinary East Germans, from workers and farmers to teenagers and even party members, 'caught out' by Sunday the Thirteenth. Party, police, and Stasi reports reveal why one in six East Germans fled the country during the 1950s, undermining communist rule and forcing the eleventh-hour decision by Khrushchev and Ulbricht to build a wall along the Cold War's frontline. Did East Germans resist or come to terms with immurement? Did the communist regime become more or less dictatorial within the confines of the so-called 'Antifascist Defence Rampart'? Using film and literature, but also the GDR's losing battle against Beatlemania, Patrick Major's cross-disciplinary study suggests that popular culture both reinforced and undermined the closed society. Linking external and internal developments, Major argues that the GDR's official quest for internationalrecognition, culminating in Ostpolitik and United Nations membership in the early 1970s, became its undoing, unleashing a human rights movement which fed into, but then broke with, the protests of 1989. After exploring the reasons for the fall of the Wall and reconstructing the heady days of the autumnrevolution, the author reflects on the fate of the Wall after 1989, as it moved from demolition into the realm of memory.
200 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9780191608247 (e-book)
9780199605101 (pbk.)
Author Major, Patrick.
Subject Berlin Wall, Berlin, Germany, 1961-1989.
Germany (East) -- Politics and government.
Germany (East) -- History.
Germany (East) -- Social conditions.

Subject Berlin Wall, Berlin, Germany, 1961-1989.
Germany (East) -- Politics and government.
Germany (East) -- History.
Germany (East) -- Social conditions.
Descript xii, 321 p. : ill., map
Note Originally published: 2010.
Contents 1. Introduction; PART I: BEFORE THE WALL 1945-61; 2. East Germany's Dual Crisis: Politics and Economics on the Eve of the Wall; 3. Crossing the Line: Republikflucht between Defection and Migration; 4. Holding the Line: Policing the Open Border; PART II: BEHIND THE WALL 1961-89; 5. Walled In: 13 August 1961; 6. In the Shadow of the Wall; 7. Wanderlust: Travel, Emigration and the Movement; PART III: BEYOND THE WALL; 8. The Fall of the Wall: 9 November 1989; 9. Seeking Closure: Remembering the Wall
Note On the 13th of August 1961, 18,000,000 East Germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the Cold War: the Berlin Wall. Patrick Major explores how the border closure affected ordinary East Germans, from workers and farmers to teenagers and even party members. Few historical changes occur literally overnight, but on 13 August 1961 eighteen million East Germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the Cold War: the Berlin Wall.This new history rejects traditional, top-down approaches to Cold War politics, exploring instead how the border closure affected ordinary East Germans, from workers and farmers to teenagers and even party members, 'caught out' by Sunday the Thirteenth. Party, police, and Stasi reports reveal why one in six East Germans fled the country during the 1950s, undermining communist rule and forcing the eleventh-hour decision by Khrushchev and Ulbricht to build a wall along the Cold War's frontline. Did East Germans resist or come to terms with immurement? Did the communist regime become more or less dictatorial within the confines of the so-called 'Antifascist Defence Rampart'? Using film and literature, but also the GDR's losing battle against Beatlemania, Patrick Major's cross-disciplinary study suggests that popular culture both reinforced and undermined the closed society. Linking external and internal developments, Major argues that the GDR's official quest for internationalrecognition, culminating in Ostpolitik and United Nations membership in the early 1970s, became its undoing, unleashing a human rights movement which fed into, but then broke with, the protests of 1989. After exploring the reasons for the fall of the Wall and reconstructing the heady days of the autumnrevolution, the author reflects on the fate of the Wall after 1989, as it moved from demolition into the realm of memory.
200 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9780191608247 (e-book)
9780199605101 (pbk.)

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