فهرست مطالب
Introduction
Notes
1. A Different Starting Point, a Different End: East and West German Historiography After 1945
Who Were the Historians?
Paradigmatic Assumptions of GDR Historians
West Germany: Traditional and Modern Historiography
After the Collapse of the GDR: What Remains?
Notes
2. Where Did Historical Studies in the German Democratic Republic Stand at the Eve of Unification?
Notes
3. The Revenge of the Krupps? Reflections on the End of GDR Historiography
Notes
4. "Once Upon a Time …": Losses in Scholarly Competence as a Result of German Unification
Notes 5. German Unification and the Debate of the West German Social Sciences One Country: Two Societies, One Scholarly Tradition?
Who Controls One's Own Identity?
The Absence of a Discussion
Discussions Without a Partner
Losses for All of Germany?
Notes
6. Anticommunist Purge or Democratic Renewal? The Transformation of the Humboldt University, 1985-2000
Socialist Scholarship
Internal Renewal Attempts
Intervention from the Outside
Arrival in the West
Controversial Results
Notes
7. Research on Fascism and Antifascism in the GDR: A Retrospective
Notes 8. Painful Transition and New Research on the History of Political Parties in Germany Note
9. Research on Conservatism in Jena: The Beginning and the End of an Interdisciplinary Research Project
Notes
10. The Dissolution of East German Economic History at the Economic University in Berlin-Karlshorst: A Typical Anschluss Procedure
Notes
11. The Dissolution of the Institute for Economic History at the Academy of Sciences
Notes
12. Dismantling the GDR's Historical Scholarship: A Case Study of the University of Leipzig
Selected Research Results by Leipzig Historians Historical Scholarship on German HistorySocioreligious Mass Movements of the High Middle Ages
The Study of Medieval Cities within the Context of Socioeconomic Struggles
The "Early Bourgeois Revolution" in Germany
The Social History of the Proletariat
Research About General and World History
Summary
The Democratic Renewal and its Derailment
Self-Directed Democratic Renewal
Derailing and Ending the Process of Democratic Renewal
Instead of Renewal: Destruction and Forced Transformation
The Patterns of Disassembling Existing Scholarship
Steps, Levels, Dimensions
Epilogue
Notes 13. From "Imperialist Class Enemy" to "Partners in Leadership" in 365 Days? East German American Studies Since 1989 Prelude
The Status Quo Ante
The Big Bang: Self-Reform, and "No Man's Land" for One Year
The Nouveau Regime: Change of Paradigms
West German Action and East German Personal Reactions
Contact Zones: American Studies (East) Meets American Studies (West)
Exceptions Prove the Rule
Conclusion and Postscript
Notes
14. Handling GDR Colonial Historiography
Notes
Notes
1. A Different Starting Point, a Different End: East and West German Historiography After 1945
Who Were the Historians?
Paradigmatic Assumptions of GDR Historians
West Germany: Traditional and Modern Historiography
After the Collapse of the GDR: What Remains?
Notes
2. Where Did Historical Studies in the German Democratic Republic Stand at the Eve of Unification?
Notes
3. The Revenge of the Krupps? Reflections on the End of GDR Historiography
Notes
4. "Once Upon a Time …": Losses in Scholarly Competence as a Result of German Unification
Notes 5. German Unification and the Debate of the West German Social Sciences One Country: Two Societies, One Scholarly Tradition?
Who Controls One's Own Identity?
The Absence of a Discussion
Discussions Without a Partner
Losses for All of Germany?
Notes
6. Anticommunist Purge or Democratic Renewal? The Transformation of the Humboldt University, 1985-2000
Socialist Scholarship
Internal Renewal Attempts
Intervention from the Outside
Arrival in the West
Controversial Results
Notes
7. Research on Fascism and Antifascism in the GDR: A Retrospective
Notes 8. Painful Transition and New Research on the History of Political Parties in Germany Note
9. Research on Conservatism in Jena: The Beginning and the End of an Interdisciplinary Research Project
Notes
10. The Dissolution of East German Economic History at the Economic University in Berlin-Karlshorst: A Typical Anschluss Procedure
Notes
11. The Dissolution of the Institute for Economic History at the Academy of Sciences
Notes
12. Dismantling the GDR's Historical Scholarship: A Case Study of the University of Leipzig
Selected Research Results by Leipzig Historians Historical Scholarship on German HistorySocioreligious Mass Movements of the High Middle Ages
The Study of Medieval Cities within the Context of Socioeconomic Struggles
The "Early Bourgeois Revolution" in Germany
The Social History of the Proletariat
Research About General and World History
Summary
The Democratic Renewal and its Derailment
Self-Directed Democratic Renewal
Derailing and Ending the Process of Democratic Renewal
Instead of Renewal: Destruction and Forced Transformation
The Patterns of Disassembling Existing Scholarship
Steps, Levels, Dimensions
Epilogue
Notes 13. From "Imperialist Class Enemy" to "Partners in Leadership" in 365 Days? East German American Studies Since 1989 Prelude
The Status Quo Ante
The Big Bang: Self-Reform, and "No Man's Land" for One Year
The Nouveau Regime: Change of Paradigms
West German Action and East German Personal Reactions
Contact Zones: American Studies (East) Meets American Studies (West)
Exceptions Prove the Rule
Conclusion and Postscript
Notes
14. Handling GDR Colonial Historiography
Notes