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- Title
Reframing the Past: Justice, Guilt, and Consolidation in East and West Germany after Nazism.
- Authors
Fulbrook, Mary; Hagemann, Karen; Jarausch, Konrad H.; Hof, Tobias
- Abstract
Only a minority of Germans involved in Nazi crimes were prosecuted after the war, and the transnational history of trials is only beginning to be explored. Even less well understood are the ways in which those who were tainted by complicity reframed their personal life stories. Millions had been willing facilitators, witting beneficiaries, or passive (and perhaps unhappily helpless) witnesses of Nazi persecution; many had been actively involved in sustaining Nazi rule; perhaps a quarter of a million had personally killed Jewish civilians, and several million had direct knowledge of genocide. How did these people re-envision their own lives after Nazism? And how did they reinterpret their own former behaviors—their actions and inaction—in light of public confrontations with Nazi crimes and constructions of "perpetrators" in trials? Going beyond well-trodden debates about "overcoming the past," this paper explores patterns of personal memory among East and West Germans after Nazism.
- Subjects
GERMANY; GERMAN history, 1945-; NAZI Germany, 1933-1945; NAZI persecution; NATIONAL socialism &; collective memory; WAR crime trials; EAST German history; WEST German history
- Publication
Central European History (Cambridge University Press / UK), 2020, Vol 53, Issue 2, p294
- ISSN
0008-9389
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S0008938920000114