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Die Sünden der Väter: Deutschland, Erinnerung, Methode von Jeffrey K. Olick: gebraucht

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Book Title
The Sins of the Fathers: Germany, Memory, Method
Publication Date
2016-11-24
Pages
496
ISBN
9780226386492
Subject Area
Psychology, History, Social Science, Political Science
Publication Name
Sins of the Fathers : Germany, Memory, Method
Item Length
0.9 in
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Subject
Europe / Germany, Sociology / General, History & Theory, World / European, Cognitive Psychology & Cognition
Publication Year
2016
Series
Chicago Studies in Practices of Meaning Ser.
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
0.1 in
Author
Jeffrey K. Olick
Item Width
0.6 in
Item Weight
31.8 Oz
Number of Pages
496 Pages

Über dieses Produkt

Product Information

Sins of the Fathers is nothing less than the "definitive book on official Nazi-era memories in Germany" (Andreas Glaeser). Olick opens up new ways to understand postwar Germany that will surprise experts (and Germans themselves) as well as offering a comprehensive model of what is best called "the politics of regret." And Olick is masterful in showing how politicians in postwar Germany, and in the face of what we all know happened during the War, found support for new institutions among a complex stew of murderers, robbers, and rapists, plus those who abetted such crimes. At the same time, Germany was mourning 10 million deaths--the effects of carpet bombings, mass-expulsion from their homelands, and repeated rape. Along the way, Olick gives us a short history of the Federal Republic of Germany, told in a riveting, flowing narrative. This account of the founding and early years of the FRG is in a sense a sequel to In the House of the Hangman, which dealt with the years (late 1943 to 1949) between the War and the founding of the West German state. The Sins of the Fathers takes up the history from 1949 to the 2000s. At the same time, Olick has supplied a brilliant treatise on collective memory, on the role of memory in the state and a diagnosis of memory in the contemporary era.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10
022638649x
ISBN-13
9780226386492
eBay Product ID (ePID)
14038263395

Product Key Features

Author
Jeffrey K. Olick
Publication Name
Sins of the Fathers : Germany, Memory, Method
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Subject
Europe / Germany, Sociology / General, History & Theory, World / European, Cognitive Psychology & Cognition
Publication Year
2016
Series
Chicago Studies in Practices of Meaning Ser.
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Psychology, History, Social Science, Political Science
Number of Pages
496 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
0.9 in
Item Height
0.1 in
Item Width
0.6 in
Item Weight
31.8 Oz

Additional Product Features

LCCN
2016-032598
Lc Classification Number
Hm1033.O293 2016
Reviews
The Sins of the Fathers is a tour de force of interdisciplinary scholarship, blending historical erudition and sociological keenness. Highly innovative, it adds important understandings to German official memory, particularly the stability of its exculpatory forms, tenses, and tropes across the last half of the twentieth century. Olick is a master translator of what he calls 'the language of the past.' Provocative and informative, this is an overwhelmingly erudite and penetrating analysis that advances the field of collective memory., In superimposing sociological nuance onto a well-researched historical narrative of official (usually political) West German memories of the Holocaust, Olick has made a monumental contribution to collective memory studies. The book felt so comfortable to this trained historian that he almost wished for an alternate edition containing Chicago -style footnotes instead of parenthetical citations. Olick employs a refreshingly accessible writing style, but he has no reservations introducing complex theoretical concepts. The book is a must-have for any university library. Essential., This truly scholarly book breaks significant new ground in connecting memory to genre, event, political context, and generation., Rather than simply, if competently, telling a familiar story, Olick asks how politics made memory and were remade by commemoration in their turn. . . . In its stringency and consequence [ The Sins of the Fathers ] is rewarding, and scholars of German and other politics of the past will ignore it at their own peril., Sins of the Fathers is the definitive book on official Nazi era memories in (West) Germany. I have little doubt that it will become a landmark in the discipline, indeed a must read for everyone concerned with memory and politics. This book will undoubtedly cement Olick's reputation as the preeminent memory scholar in the field of sociology. More, by linking memory, meaning, and history, and by finding new ways of thinking about the amalgamation of past, present, and future, of symbolic orders and everyday exigencies, Olick's book also makes a significant contribution to cultural sociology that will be widely discussed. A brilliant study., For a generation, memory of German crimes during the Second World War has functioned as Europe's ethical constitution, and nowhere is this status more evident than in Germany. In The Sins of the Fathers , sociologist Olick produces the most empirically extensive and methodologically sophisticated discussion yet written about this society's tortured wrestling with the question of inherited, collective guilt. It is sure to become a classic., Skillfully combines empirical exploration, historical and political erudition, and theoretical insight.
Table of Content
Preface Part One: Introduction 1 Placing Memory in Germany 2 The Sociology of Collective Memory 3 Prologues: The Origins of West German Memory Part Two: The Reliable Nation 4 Bonn Is Not Weimar 5 Expiation and Explanation 6 Germany in the West 7 The Return of the Repressed 8 The Reliable Nation Part Three: The Moral Nation 9 Seeds of Change 10 The Grand Coalition and the Wider World 11 Social-Liberal Guilt 12 The Moral Nation Part Four: The Normal Nation 13 West Germany's Normal Problems 14 The New Conservatism 15 The Politics of History 16 Beyond Bitburg 17 The Normal Nation Part Five: Conclusions 18 Epilogues: Berlin Is Not Bonn 19 History, Memory, and Temporality Appendix References Index
Copyright Date
2016
Target Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Decimal
909.0943
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes

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