Drawing on oral narratives and archival sources gathered in
Berlin, this study explores how some 35 Berliners have woven
personal memories, their city's divided past, and their nation's
complex historical legacy into cohesive life narratives and
collective identities. Redding argues that daily experience during
the final years of World War II inadvertently prepared German youth
for defeat and occupation. While postwar officials lamented youth's
apparent apathy, young Berliners were in fact applying lessons in
pragmatism and self-reliance learned as National Socialist society
crumbled in 1944 and 1945. Although competing political forces
strove to rapidly remobilize German youth, young Berliners took
advantage of destabilized sociopolitical structures in their
war-torn city to assert autonomy and pursue personal
initiatives.
Their retrospective narratives reveal creative efforts to claim
for themselves the normal pleasures of modern youth in the midst of
rubble. These accounts also demonstrate how Cold War ideologies and
loyalties have informed memories of daily life in Allied occupied
Berlin. In a broader sense, the study sheds new light on the
collective experiences, memories, and self-perceptions of a
generation of Germans who grew up in a world defined by World War
II and Allied occupation, rebuilt their devastated society under
Cold War parameters, and eventually negotiated the unification of
the two successor states.
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