Editorial Reviews
Book Description
What is Germany, the powerful new center of a newly reorganized Europe? Or rather, can there be a 'new Germany'? And if so, what would it be?
After the crimes of the Nazis, the Cold War and the subsequent division of Germany, the unification of Germany and of Europe, these questions are difficult, and vital. This volume of new work is not a collection by like-minded 'usual suspects'. Instead, the editors have brought together radically different viewpoints and concerns. Richard van Weizsäcker, former President of the Federal Republic of Germany, reflects on Goethe's legacy and the process of European union, while the filmmaker Monika Treut addresses the fate of German cinema and the peril of 'international oblivion'. Each of the contributors, however, is possessed of a passionate interest in what Germany is and is to become. Writing on Berlin's new Jewish Museum and other memorials, the state of multiculturalism in Germany, or future of German culture in a unified Europe, these voices lay before us the questions that face not only Germany but anyone concerned with Germany's history and the future of Europe.
About the Author
Todd Herzog teaches in the Department of German at the University of Chicago. Sander Gilman is Henry R. Luce Distinguished Service Professor of the Liberal Arts in Human Biology at the University of Chicago and past-president of the Modern Language Association. Among his books are The Jew's Body and Franz Kafka, the Jewish Patient, both published by Routledge.
A New Germany in a New Europe,TODD HERZOG,Routledge,0415928087,1990-,Cultural policy,Ethnic relations,Europe - Germany,Germany,Government - Comparative,International Relations - General,Politics - Current Events,Popular Culture - General,Social Science,Social conditions,Sociology,EU & European institutions,European history: postwar, from c 1945 -,European studies
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