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Conflict and Strability in the German Democratic republic

개인저자
Andrew I. Port
발행사항
New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007
형태사항
303 p. ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780521744171
청구기호
925 P839c
서지주기
Includes index
소장정보
위치등록번호청구기호 / 출력상태반납예정일
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책 소개
Why did the German Democratic Republic last for so long - longer, in fact, than the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich combined? This book looks at various political, social, and economic conflicts at the grass roots of the GDR in an attempt to answer this question and account for regime stability. A local study, it examines opposition and discontent in Saalfeld, an important industrial and agricultural district. Based on previously inaccessible primary sources as well as on interviews with local residents, the book offers a novel explanation for the durability of the regime by looking at how authorities tried to achieve harmony and consensus through negotiation and compromise. At the same time, it shows how official policies created deep-seated social cleavages that promoted stability by hindering East Germans from presenting a united front to authorities when mounting opposition or pressing for change. All of this provides an indirect answer to perhaps the major question of the postwar period: Why did the Cold War last as long as it did?

This book explores the reasons why the post-World War II Communist regime in East Germany outlasted both the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich.

목차

Part I. Upheaval (1945?53): 1. Creating a 'new order'; 2. The GDR's 'first strike'; 3. The revolution manque of June 1953; Part II. The Calm after the Storm (1953?71): 4. The limits of repression; 5. Exit, voice, and apathy; 6. Power in the people's factories; 7. Achieving harmony on the shop floor; 8. Divide and rule?; 9. 'I comes before we' in the countryside; 10. 'Whatever happened to the classless society?'