Lexington Books
Pages: 320
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-1839-9 • Hardback • February 2008 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-0-7391-1840-5 • Paperback • February 2010 • $59.99 • (£46.00)
978-0-7391-4417-6 • eBook • February 2010 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Dirk Verheyen is the academic director of the FU-BEST (Berlin European Studies) Program at Freie UniversitSt Berlin.
Chapter 1 A City and a Nation Between Memory and Future
Chapter 2 Capturing Memory and Crafting Identity
Chapter 3 Victors and Adversaries: The Legacy of the Great Powers
Chapter 4 Occupation, Confrontation, Departure: the Great Powers in Postwar Berlin
Chapter 5 Soviet Traces
Chapter 6 The Western Allies: A Vanishing Legacy?
Chapter 7 Great Powers on Display: A Brief Tale of Two Museums
Chapter 8 Beyond Files and Trials: Public Remembrance and the Legacy of the Stasi
Chapter 9 Bureaucratic Shield and Repressive Sword: Rise and Demise of the Stasi
Chapter 10 Tyrannical Banality on Display: the Stasi Museum
Chapter 11 The Commemoration of Persecution in Hohenschönhausen
Chapter 12 Coming to Terms with the Second German Dictatorship
Chapter 13 The Berlin Wall: Meaning and Memory
Chapter 14 Monumental Schizophrenia: The Berlin Wall and Concrete Closure
Chapter 15 Commemorating a Vanishing Monument
Chapter 16 Checkpoint and Watchtower Museums
Chapter 17 Painting and Tracing the Wall
Each topic is very thoroughly documented, weaving together historical information and current political debates surrounding memorial sites....Highly valuable as a chronicle of the politics of memory....Recommended. Two-star review.....
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Dirk Verheyen has written a fascinating, exhaustive analysis of the evolving and conflicting memories of the Cold War memorialized by the most controversial monuments and museums in Berlin. He is at his best in his demonstration of the ongoing controversies....
— Robert Billinger
Verheyen's book is a useful and welcome history of reunified Germany's troubled capital over the last two decades.....
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Anyone who has been in Berlin over the past decade will recognize the diverse and frequently contradictory emotions that politicians, intellectuals, architects, and pundits have evoked in their efforts to bring the city together again. Dirk Verheyen has written a thoughtful and perceptive book that captures the complexity of these endeavors and that is always sensitive to the challenges all human beings face in wrestling with historical memory. This study will be of interest not only to those who are fascinated with Berlin, but also to anyone who seeks to make sense of the multiple, overlapping histories that continue to challenge Germany as a whole...
— A. James McAdams, director, Nanovic Institute for European Studies, University of Notre Dame