"Ambiguous Memory" examines the role of memory in the building
of a new national identity in reunified Germany. The author
maintains that the contentious debates surrounding contemporary
monumnets to the Nazi past testify to the ambiguity of German
memory and the continued link of Nazism with contemporary German
national identity. The book discusses how certain monuments, and
the ways Germans have viewed them, contribute to the different ways
Germans have dealt with the past, and how they continue to deal
with it as one country. Kattago concludes that West Germans have
internalized their Nazi past as a normative orientation for the
democratic culture of West Germany, while East Germans have
universalized Nazism and the Holocaust, transforming it into an
abstraction in which the Jewish question is down played. In order
to form a new collective memory, the author argues that unified
Germany must contend with these conflicting views of the past,
incorporating certain aspects of both views.
Providing a topography of East, West, and unified German memory
during the 1980s and the 1990s, this work contributes to a better
understanding of contemporary national identity and society. The
author shows how public debate over such issues at Ronald Reagan's
visit to Bitburg, the renarration of Buchenwald as Nazi and Soviet
internment camp, the Goldhagen controversy, and the Holocaust
Memorial debate in Berlin contribute to the complexities
surrounding the way Germans see themselves, their relationship to
the past, and their future identity as a nation. In a careful
analysis, the author shows how the past was used and abused by both
the East and the West in the 1980s, and how these approaches merged
in the 1990s. This interesting new work takes a sociological
approach to the role of memory in forging a new, integrative
national identity.
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