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From:ReVision (Vol. 22, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe article describes the exhibition titled War of Destruction: Crimes of the German Army and the controversy it elicited when opening in Munich, Germany. Reasons for interest in this subject, the psychological aspects...
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From:European Judaism (Vol. 49, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract This article discusses two academic events devoted to Holocaust studies in which participants became unconsciously involved in re-enacting the behaviour respectively of Holocaust perpetrators, and of victims...
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From:Austrian History Yearbook (Vol. 34) Peer-ReviewedON NOVEMBER 27, 1905, leading members of the Czech and German communities in Moravia agreed to a political compromise that divided power in the provincial diet between Czechs, Germans, and members of the landowning and...
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From:German Politics and Society (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn 1995, as a Fulbright professor, I taught a seminar on "culture and international order" at Humboldt University in Berlin. There I reached the conclusion that, in order to analyze Kultur in Germany, one also had to...
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From:Management International Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract * The internationalization of business education raises the question of the effectiveness of cross-cultural business education. On the basis of an empirical study at the European University Viadrina in...
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From:Diabetes (Vol. 50, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedRecently, an association of the G allele in UCSNP-43 of calpain 10 with type 2 diabetes and decreased glucose disposal was reported. Calpain 10 is also expressed in pancreatic islets. It is not known, however, whether...
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From:The McKinsey QuarterlyPeer-ReviewedThe people are ready for change and for the tough decisions needed to push the economy. Their leaders now have a chance to engage them in a serious dialogue about economic reform and revival. Germany, once the home...
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From:German Politics and Society (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI. "Fahren wir in das Land der Kultur" Marcel Reich-Ranicki, the German literary critic, recalls in his recent memoirs that at age ten, when he set out from his small town in Poland, his teacher said with tears in...
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From:German Politics and Society (Vol. 20, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis article discusses a screenplay of the television thriller Armer Nanosh (Poor Nanosh), written in 1989 (1) by the famous German author Martin Walser and Asta Scheib. (2) The screenplay deals with the relations...
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From:East European Quarterly (Vol. 29, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMost Poles perceive Germans as haughty, racist, aggressive, conceited, overconfident, eager for conquest, acquisitive, hostile towards other nations, noisy, crude, slavishly obedient, nationalist and chauvinist. These...
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From:Michigan Academician (Vol. 38, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedPrivate Life in the Public Sphere in Early Modern Freiburg. Regina Smith, Grand Valley State University The quaint old cities of Germany offer a charming picture, often leading us to project an idealized image of...
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From:German Politics and Society (Vol. 23, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedBetween the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the sixtieth anniversary of the end of World War II more than fifteen years later, Germany witnessed not only a proliferation of events and experiences to be remembered but...
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From:British Medical Journal (Vol. 321, Issue 7269) Peer-ReviewedThe unification of Germany has had an impact on the health of former East Germans. Life expectancy increased, the infant mortality rate decreased, and there are fewer deaths from injuries and violence among young men and...
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From:Austrian History YearbookPeer-ReviewedTHE SCHOLARLY RECORD leaves no doubt that Austrian citizens played a major role in the criminal activities of the Third Reich. Even before the Anschluss, former Austrian citizens held prominent positions within...
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From:Austrian History Yearbook (Vol. 42) Peer-ReviewedBEFORE THE UNITED STATES ENTERED WORLD WAR II, major Hollywood studios had been slow to produce films critical of the Nazi regime. In addition to fearing that such films would alienate the lucrative European market and...
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From:Feminist Studies (Vol. 40, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedI FIRST MET AUDRE LORDE IN 1980 at the United Nations World Women's Conference in Copenhagen. At the time I was an assistant professor of North American studies at the Free University of Berlin and in a position to...
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From:German Politics and Society (Vol. 21, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI. Introduction: A New Clash of Memories? Are collective memories currently changing in the land where the "past won't go away?" Long dominated by memory of the Holocaust and other Nazi-era crimes, Germany recently...
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From:Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society (Vol. 92, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedLocal stories add not only colour, but also a sinister edge to accounts of anti-German attitudes, such as those related to internment that were recently explored at the national level by John Moses. (1) Moses and others...
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From:The American Enterprise (Vol. 8, Issue 1)By Daniel Jonah Goldhagen; Alfred A. Knopf 622 pages, $30 Daniel Goldhagen has acquired a following that includes journalist A.M. Rosenthal, Harvard associates Simon Schama, Sidney Verba, and Stanley Hoffmann, and...
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From:Jewish Social Studies (Vol. 9, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIt is often said that history is written by the victors. In contemporary remembering of the fate of Jews in mid-twentieth-century Europe, however, we see in action a phenomenon widespread in the formation of modern...