Virtual Walls?: Political Unification and Cultural Difference in Contemporary Germany
By Franziska Lys (Editor), Michael Dreyer (Editor), Andreas Eis (Contribution by), Andreas Niederberger (Contribution by), April A. Eisman (Contribution by), Charles S. Maier (Contribution by), Daniel Ortuno-St hring (Contribution by), Franziska Lys (Contribution by), Kerstin Barndt (Contribution by), Mary-Elizabeth O'Brien (Contribution by), Michael Dreyer (Contribution by), Peter Hayes (Contribution by), Stephen Brockmann (Contribution by)
Hardcover
$110.00
By Franziska Lys (Editor), Michael Dreyer (Editor), Andreas Eis (Contribution by), Andreas Niederberger (Contribution by), April A. Eisman (Contribution by), Charles S. Maier (Contribution by), Daniel Ortuno-St hring (Contribution by), Franziska Lys (Contribution by), Kerstin Barndt (Contribution by), Mary-Elizabeth O'Brien (Contribution by), Michael Dreyer (Contribution by), Peter Hayes (Contribution by), Stephen Brockmann (Contribution by)
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A reassessment of the journey Germans in East and West have taken during the past two and a half decades: even today, an openended, unfinished journey.
On October 3, 1990, just a year after the Berlin Wall fell, the German Democratic Republic was absorbed into the Federal Republic of Germany, officially ceasing to exist. What was the GDR and how do we remember it? According to the dominant Western narrative, it was a country that brought neither unity nor justice nor freedom to its citizens...
On October 3, 1990, just a year after the Berlin Wall fell, the German Democratic Republic was absorbed into the Federal Republic of Germany, officially ceasing to exist. What was the GDR and how do we remember it? According to the dominant Western narrative, it was a country that brought neither unity nor justice nor freedom to its citizens...


