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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
Although "entanglement" has become a keyword in recent German history scholarship, entangled studies of the postwar era have largely limited their scope to politics and economics across the two Germanys while giving short shrift to social and cultural phenomena like gender. At the same time, historians of gender in Germany have tended to treat East and West Germany in isolation, with little attention paid to intersections and interrelationships between the two countries. This groundbreaking collection synthesizes the perspectives of entangled history and gender studies, bringing together established as well as upcoming scholars to investigate the ways in which East and West German gender relations were culturally, socially, and politically intertwined.
Although "entanglement" has become a keyword in recent German history scholarship, entangled studies of the postwar era have largely limited their scope to politics and economics across the two Germanys while giving short shrift to social and cultural phenomena like gender. At the same time, historians of gender in Germany have tended to treat East and West Germany in isolation, with little attention paid to intersections and interrelationships between the two countries. This groundbreaking collection synthesizes the perspectives of entangled history and gender studies, bringing together established as well as upcoming scholars to investigate the ways in which East and West German gender relations were culturally, socially, and politically intertwined.
"Revenge of the Domestic" examines gender relations in East Germany from 1945 to the 1970s, focusing especially on the relationship between ordinary women, the Communist Party, and the state created by the Communists, the German Democratic Republic (GDR). The book weaves together personal stories from interviews, statistical material, and evidence from archival research in Berlin, Potsdam, Leipzig, Merseburg, and Chemnitz to reconstruct the complex interplay between state policy toward women and the family on the one hand, and women's reactions to policy on the other. Donna Harsch demonstrates that women resisted state decisions as citizens, wageworkers, mothers, wives, and consumers, and that in every guise they maneuvered to overcome official neglect of the family. As state dependence on female employment increased, the book shows, the Communists began to respond to the insistence of women that the state pay attention to the family. In fits and starts, the party state begrudgingly retooled policy in a more consumerist and family-oriented direction. This "domestication" was partial, ambivalent, and barely acknowledged from above. It also had ambiguous, arguably regressive, effects on the private gender arrangements and attitudes of East Germans. Nonetheless, the economic and social consequences of this domestication were cumulatively powerful and, the book argues, gradually undermined the foundations of the GDR.
"German Social Democracy and the Rise of Nazism" explores the
failure of Germany's largest political party to stave off the Nazi
threat to the Weimar republic. In 1928 members of the Social
Democratic Party (SPD) were elected to the chancellorship and
thousands of state and municipal offices. But despite the party's
apparent strengths, in 1933 Social Democracy succumbed to Nazi
power without a fight. Previous scholarship has blamed this
reversal of fortune on bureaucratic paralysis, but in this
revisionist evaluation, Donna Harsch argues that the party's
internal dynamics immobilized the SPD. Harsch looks closely at
Social Democratic ideology, structure, and political culture,
examining how each impinged upon the party's response to economic
disaster, parliamentary crisis, and the Nazis. She considers
political and organizational interplay within the SPD as well as
interaction between the party, the Socialist trade unions, and the
republican defense league. Conceding that lethargy and conservatism
hampered the SPD, Harsch focuses on strikingly inventive ideas put
forward by various Social Democrats to address the republic's
crisis. She shows how the unresolved competition among these
proposals blocked innovations that might have thwarted Nazism.
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