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- Title
Breakthrough at Stalingrad: The Repressed Soviet Origins of a Bestselling West German War Tale.
- Authors
HELLBECK, JOCHEN
- Abstract
The article delves into the concealed origins of Heinrich Gerlach's 1957 Stalingrad novel. A German veteran and former Soviet POW, Gerlach claimed to have recovered the memory of his wartime experience through hypnosis, after the original script, which he wrote in captivity, was confiscated by Soviet authorities. The author discovered this manuscript, believed lost, in Russian archives. It reveals how Soviet political re-education efforts prompted Gerlach to compose a memoir revolving around questions of personal complicity and guilt in German wartime crimes. Gerlach removed these soul-searching passages, as well as any reference to the Soviet origins of his memoir, from the published novel, which he presented as a self-generated inquiry into the tragedy of German soldiers abandoned by Hitler.
- Subjects
VOLGOGRAD (Russia); SOVIET Union; GERMANY; GERLACH, Heinrich; DIE verratene Armee (Book); BATTLE of Stalingrad, Volgograd, Russia, 1942-1943, in literature; HYPNOTISM; RECOVERED memory; LOST manuscripts; WORLD War II German personal narratives; PRISONERS &; prisons in World War II
- Publication
Contemporary European History, 2013, Vol 22, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0960-7773
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S096077731200046X