This wide-ranging study explores changing conceptions of home and Heimat in West Germany from the end of the Second World War to national reunification. Jeremy DeWaal challenges ideas that Heimat was taboo or a largely reactionary idea after 1945, exploring efforts to reconceive the concept in democratic, inclusive, and post-nationalist ways.
The term 'Heimat', referring to a local sense of home and belonging, has been the subject of much scholarly and popular debate following the fall of the Third Reich. Countering the persistent myth that Heimat was a taboo and unusable term immediately after 1945, Geographies of Renewal uncovers overlooked efforts in the aftermath of the Second World War to conceive of Heimat in more democratic, inclusive, and pro-European modes. It revises persistent misconceptions of Heimat as either tainted or as a largely reactionary idea, revealing some surprisingly early identifications between home and democracy. Jeremy DeWaal further traces the history of efforts to eliminate the concept, which first emerged during the Cold War crisis of the early 1960s and reassesses why so many on the political left sought to re-engage with Heimat in the 1970s and 1980s. This revisionist history intervenes in larger contemporary debates, asking compelling questions surrounding the role of the local, the value of community, and the politics of place attachments.
Papildus informācija
Explores changing conceptions of Heimat in West Germany from the end of the Second World War to national reunification.
Introduction;
1. Heimat, renewal and life after death in a Rhenish
Metropolis;
2. 'Democratic' and 'Open to the World': reshaping narratives of
local identity in cologne;
3. Heimat and renewal at the water's edge:
Hamburg, Lübeck, and Bremen;
4. Contesting the spatial foundations of
democracy: The Southwest State Debates, 19451956;
5. The Nation as a
redemptive geography: Heimat meetings and expellee politics;
6. Transcending
the need for home?: The anti-Heimat movement of the 1960s;
7. Between
Rhetoric and practice: re-reading the Heimat renaissance, 1970-1989;
Epilogue: the immutable Heimat question; Bibliography; Index.
Jeremy DeWaal is a Lecturer in European History at the University of Exeter. His research focuses on German cultural history, spatial history, memory, and the history of emotions. DeWaal's work on Heimat and democracy has been supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the German Academic Exchange Service, the Central European History Society, and the Berlin Programme at the Free University of Berlin.