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Burned Bridge - How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,103
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Burned Bridge - How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Paperback)
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The building of the Berlin Wall in 1961 shocked the world. Ever
since, the image of this impenetrable barrier between East and
West, imposed by communism, has been a central symbol of the Cold
War. Based on vast research in untapped archival, oral, and private
sources, Burned Bridge reveals the hidden origins of the Iron
Curtain, presenting it in a startling new light. Historian Edith
Sheffer's unprecedented, in-depth account focuses on Burned
Bridge-the intersection between two sister cities, Sonneberg and
Neustadt bei Coburg, Germany's largest divided population outside
Berlin. Sheffer demonstrates that as Soviet and American forces
occupied each city after the Second World War, townspeople who
historically had much in common quickly formed opposing interests
and identities. The border walled off irreconcilable realities: the
differences of freedom and captivity, rich and poor, peace and
bloodshed, and past and present. Sheffer describes how smuggling,
kidnapping, rape, and killing in the early postwar years led
citizens to demand greater border control on both sides-long before
East Germany fortified its 1,393 kilometer border with West
Germany. It was in fact the American military that built the first
barriers at Burned Bridge, which preceded East Germany's borderland
crackdown by many years. Indeed, Sheffer shows that the physical
border between East and West was not simply imposed by Cold War
superpowers, but was in some part an improvised outgrowth of an
anxious postwar society. Ultimately, a wall of the mind shaped the
wall on the ground. East and West Germans became part of, and
helped perpetuate, the barriers that divided them. From the end of
World War II through two decades of reunification, Sheffer traces
divisions at Burned Bridge with sharp insight and compassion,
presenting a stunning portrait of the Cold War on a human scale.
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