'Is he still alive, or long since dead?': Loss, Absence and Remembrance in Nuremberg, 1945-1956 |
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Authors: | Gregor Neil |
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Institution: | University of Southampton |
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Abstract: | This article uses the search for the missing Wehrmachtsoldiers in the 1950s as a prism through which to explore theways in which we might insert the notion of trauma into ourunderstanding of West Germany's status as a postwar society.In seeking to point out the connections between the ways inwhich ordinary Germans suffered during and afterthe war on the one hand, and the inability of post-war WestGerman society to confront the crimes of the paston the other, it argues that the traumatizing impact of warhas to be considered alongside the ideological and politicalnecessities of the Cold War and reconstruction if we are tounderstand why West German society failed to place the Holocaustat the centre of its memorial culture in the immediate post-waryears. Moreover, in pointing to the Lutheran church as a keysite of memorial politics in the post-war era, it argues forthe integration of a study of religious narratives, mentalitiesand discourses into an understanding of the evolution of thecommemorative practices of the 1950s which has hitherto beenshaped by an excessively one-sided focus on secular sites andnarratives. |
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