
Honecker’s children : Youth and Patriotism in East(ern) Germany, 1979-2002.
Title:
Honecker’s children : Youth and Patriotism in East(ern) Germany, 1979-2002.
Author:
Saunders, Anna.
ISBN:
9781847794437
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (265 pages)
Contents:
9780719074110 -- 9780719074110 -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of tables and figures -- Acknowledgements -- List of abbreviations and key terms -- Introduction: Honecker's Germany -a world of the past? -- Eastern identity in the wake of the GDR -- Frameworks: defining the GDR in the 1980s -- Growing up under Honecker -- Researching young behaviours -- 1 The parameters of patriotism -- Nation and state -- Germany: problematic patriotisms -- The GDR's patriotic programme -- Conclusion -- 2 Young people of the 1980s: ageneration of loyal patriots? -- The foundations of identity: historical consciousness -- 'Peace must be armed!': protecting the fatherland -- 'Educating hatred': young people and the 'imperialist' West -- Proletarian internationalism: the politics of solidarity -- Rooted in the present? Pride in the achievements of the GDR -- Conclusion -- 3 October 1989-October 1990:the rise and fall of a GDR identity -- Reform and renewal: education and youth work during the Wende -- Hope of a reformed socialism: 9 October-9 November 1989 -- From socialism to scepticism: 9 November 1989-18 March 1990 -- The GDR becomes history: 18 March-3 October 1990 -- Conclusion -- 4 Civic loyalties in the wake of unification -- Societal change and education in the absence of the blue shirt -- The double burden of overcoming the past: historical consciousness in united Germany -- Military loyalties in the absence of the enemy -- International allegiances in a new world order -- United yet divided? Social, economic and political trendssince the Wende -- Conclusion -- 5 Conclusion: death of the GDR -rebirth of an eastern identity? -- Select bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
During the final decade of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), young citizens found themselves at the heart of a rigorous programme of socialist patriotic education, yet following the fall of the Berlin Wall, the emphasis of official state rhetoric, textbooks and youth activities changed beyond recognition. For the young generation growing up during this period, 'normality' was turned on its head, leaving a sense of insecurity and inner turmoil.Using a combination of archival research and interviews, together with educational materials and government reports, this book examines the relationship between young people and their two successive states in East(ern) Germany between 1979 and 2002. This unusual time-span straddles the 1989/1990 caesura which often delimits historical studies, and thus enables not only a detailed examination of GDR socialisation, but crucially also its influence in unified Germany. Anna Saunders explores the extent to which a young generation's loyalties can be officially regulated in the face of cultural and historical traditions, changing material conditions and shifting social circumstances, and finds GDR socialisation to be influential to post-unification loyalties through its impact on the personal sphere, rather than through the official sphere of ideological propaganda. At a time of globalisation, this lucid study not only provides unique insight into the functioning of the GDR state and its longer-term impact, but also advances our broader understanding of the ways in which collective loyalties are formed. It will be of particular interest to those in the fields of German History and Politics, European Studies and Sociology.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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