Antifascism After Hitler

Antifascism After Hitler
Author: Catherine Plum
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2015-02-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1317599284

Antifascism After Hitler investigates the antifascist stories, memory sites and youth reception that were critical to the success of political education in East German schools and extracurricular activities. As the German Democratic Republic (GDR) promoted national identity and socialist consciousness, two of the most potent historical narratives to permeate youth education became tales of communist resistors who fought against fascism and the heroic deeds of the Red Army in World War II. These stories and iconic images illustrate the message that was presented to school-age children and adolescents in stages as they advanced through school and participated in the official communist youth organizations and other activities. This text delivers the first comprehensive study of youth antifascism in the GDR, extending scholarship beyond the level of the state to consider the everyday contributions of local institutions and youth mentors responsible for conveying stories and commemorative practices to generations born during WWII and after the defeat of fascism. While the government sought to use educators and former resistance fighters as ideological shock troops, it could not completely dictate how these stories would be told, with memory intermediaries altering at times the narrative and message. Using a variety of primary sources including oral history interviews, the author also assesses how students viewed antifascism, with reactions ranging from strong identification to indifference and dissent. Antifascist education and commemoration were never simply state-prescribed and were not as "participation-less" as some scholars and contemporary observers claim, even as educators fought a losing battle to maintain enthusiasm.

Die Neueren Sprachen

Die Neueren Sprachen
Author: Wilhelm Viëtor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 732
Release: 1896
Genre: Languages, Modern
ISBN:

Vols. 1-5 include a separately paged section "Phonetische Studien. Beiblatt."

Teaching a Dark Chapter

Teaching a Dark Chapter
Author: Daniela R. P. Weiner
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2024-07-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1501775456

Teaching a Dark Chapter explores how textbook narratives about the Fascist/Nazi past in Italy, East Germany, and West Germany followed relatively calm, undisturbed paths of little change until isolated "flashpoints" catalyzed the educational infrastructure into periods of rapid transformation. Though these flashpoints varied among Italy and the Germanys, they all roughly conformed to a chronological scheme and permanently changed how each "dark past" was represented. Historians have often neglected textbooks as sources in their engagement with the reconstruction of postfascist states and the development of postwar memory culture. But as Teaching a Dark Chapter demonstrates, textbooks yield new insights and suggest a new chronology of the changes in postwar memory culture that other sources overlook. Employing a methodological and temporal rethinking of the narratives surrounding the development of European Holocaust memory, Daniela R. P. Weiner reveals how, long before 1968, textbooks in these three countries served as important tools to influence public memory about Nazi/Fascist atrocities. As Fascism had been spread through education, then education must play a key role in undoing the damage. Thus, to repair and shape postwar societies, textbooks became an avenue to inculcate youths with desirable democratic and socialist values. Teaching a Dark Chapter weds the historical study of public memory with the educational study of textbooks to ask how and why the textbooks were created, what they said, and how they affected the society around them.

Horace

Horace
Author: Horace
Publisher:
Total Pages: 752
Release: 1878
Genre:
ISBN:

Textbook Reds

Textbook Reds
Author: John Rodden
Publisher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 492
Release: 2010-11-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780271047560

Textbook Reds is a work in the sociology of education, and literary sociology and history. Rodden shows that the deepest roots of German Democratic Republic society were indeed located in the institution that molded the youth of its citizens.

Stefan Zweig

Stefan Zweig
Author:
Publisher: Ariadne Press (CA)
Total Pages: 962
Release: 1991
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

Randolph Klawiter produced the first of bibliography Zweig's works in 1965. He has now completed a new work that subsumes the first bibliography and carries the listings forward to 1988. Klawiter has added material to correct errors and fill in omissions in his earlier bibliography. -- The present comprehensive work contains seventeen divisions covering all of the works by and about Zweig in fifty-seven languages. It should stand as the definitive bibliography on Zweig for some time to come.

Postwar History Education in Japan and the Germanys

Postwar History Education in Japan and the Germanys
Author: Julian Beatus Dierkes
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2010
Genre: Germany
ISBN: 1135193649

How did East and West Germany and Japan reconstitute national identity after World War II? Did all three experience parallel reactions to national trauma and reconstruction?History education shaped how these nations reconceived their national identities. Because the content of history education was controlled by different actors, history education materials framed national identity in very different ways. In Japan, where the curriculum was controlled by bureaucrats bent on maintaining their purported neutrality, materials focused on the empirical building blocks of history (wh.

German as Contact Zone

German as Contact Zone
Author: Russell West-Pavlov
Publisher: Narr Francke Attempto Verlag
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2019-09-09
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3823391437

This book suggests that linguistic translation is one minute province of an immense process of creative activity that constitutes the world as an ongoing dynamism of unceasing transformation. Building upon the speculative quantum gravity theory, which provides a narrative of the push-pull dynamics of transformative translation from the very smallest scales of reality to the very greatest, this book argues that the so-called translative turn of the 1990s was correct in positing translation as a paradigmatic concept of transformation. More radically, the book stages a provocative provincialization of linguistic translation, so that literary translation in particular is shown to display a remarkable awareness of its own participation in a larger creative contact zone. As a result, the German language, literary translations in and out of German, and the German-language classroom, can be understood respectively as quantum contact zones. Russell West-Pavlov is Professor of Anglophone Literatures at the University of Tübingen and Research Associate at the University of Pretoria.