Deutschland einig Vaterland?

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 18-31
Author(s):  
Christian Schweiger

Thirty years on from the peaceful revolution in the former communist German Democratic Republic (GDR) Germany remains profoundly divided between the perspectives of Germans living in the eastern and the western parts of the country, which is becoming ever more obvious by the polarization of domestic politics. Hence, Germany today resembles a nation which is formally unified but deeply divided internally in cultural and political terms. This article examines the background to the growing cleavages between eastern and western regions, which have their roots in the mistakes that were made as part of the management of the domestic aspects of German reunification. From a historic-institutionalist perspective the merger of the pathways of the two German states has not taken place. Instead, unified Germany is characterized by the dominance of the institutional pathway of the former West German Federal Republic, which has substantially contributed to the self-perception of East Germans as dislocated, second-class citizens.

2006 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 453-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
KARL CHRISTIAN LAMMERS

This article analyses Danish relations with the two German states. After 1949 Denmark found itself in a special position as the only West European country that was neighbour to both Germanys, having a land border with the Federal Republic and a sea border and important communications links with the German Democratic Republic. But Denmark recognised only the Federal Republic as the legitimate representative of Germany. Germany had historically constituted a serious problem for Denmark, and even in the after-war period Danish relations with its big neighbour were beset with problems. After 1955, when the minority question was settled and Denmark and the FRG were both members of NATO, relations with West Germany improved. Relations with the GDR were much more troubled because Denmark was to an extent forced to bow to West German interests, but could not ignore the existence of the East German neighbour state.


Author(s):  

Abstract A new distribution map is provided for Phomopsis sclerotioides van Kesteren. Hosts: Cucumber (Cucumis sativus) and other Cucurbitaceae. Information is given on the geographical distribution in Asia, India, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Malaysia, Sabah, Europe, Denmark, France, German Democratic Republic, German Federal Republic, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, England, North America, Canada, BC.


Author(s):  

Abstract A new distribution map is provided for Peronospora rubi Rabenhorst. Host: Rubus spp. AFRICA South Africa (W. Schwabe, pers. Comm.). Information is given on the geographical distribution in ASIA, USSR, Azerbaijan, AUSTRALASIA & OCEANIA, New Zealand, EUROPE, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, German, Democratic Republic, German, Federal Republic, Italy, Norway, Poland, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, England, Wales, USSR, Latvia, NORTH AMERICA, Canada, USA.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 223-251
Author(s):  
Marcus Colla

ABSTRACTThe communist regimes of Eastern Europe carried a particular set of assumptions about the way past, present and future related to one another. In the case of the German Democratic Republic (the GDR), these assumptions manifested themselves in official language and propaganda as a defence of the regime's dynamic and forward-looking historicity against the ‘ahistorical’ and ‘nostalgic’ modes of understanding that supposedly typified the historical consciousness of its West German adversary. By this view, the German Federal Republic – and the capitalist West more generally – lacked both a meaningful past and a meaningful future. This article investigates how the East German regime articulated its historicity as a direct expression of its state identity. In particular, it examines how it sought to rationalise newly emerging historical and cultural practices in the GDR within the framework of a modern and progressive socialist historicity, and how it deployed these as an argument against the ‘nostalgic’ practices of the Federal Republic.


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