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Greta Kuckhoff belonged to the anti-Nazi resistance group 'The Red
Orchestra' and was condemned to death in 1943. Her sentence was
later commuted to imprisonment and she was liberated by the Red
Army in 1945. She spent the next thirty years working to
commemorate the group's antifascist resistance. Through radio
broadcasts, letters, exhibitions, journal articles, film, and
autobiography, she fought against Cold War narratives which
condemned the group as traitors or hailed them as Soviet spies.
Using previously unpublished archival sources, this book traces the
fascinating life writings of this key figure from the GDR. It draws
attention to gendered politics of remembering, to the role of
memories of the Holocaust, and to the political identities offered
by these diverse forms of commemoration. In doing so, it
provocatively intervenes in the contentious debates about
remembering antifascism in contemporary Germany.
Greta Kuckhoff belonged to the anti-Nazi group, 'The Red
Orchestra'. She survived the War and spent the next thirty years
working to commemorate their resistance. Using previously
unpublished sources, this book traces the interventions of this key
figure and raises provocative questions about remembering
antifascism in contemporary Germany.
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