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Selected Bibliography

© 2024, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

© 2024, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. List of Tables VII
  4. List of Abbreviations VIII
  5. List of Contributors XIII
  6. Foreword XIV
  7. Introduction. German Historians and Central European History in North America after 1945 1
  8. Part I. German (Migrant) Historians in North America since 1945: Careers and Academic Institutions
  9. Chapter 1. Labor Migrants, Explorers, and Academic Intermediaries: German Historians in North America since 1945 21
  10. Chapter 2. Transatlantic Mediators or Scholars Abroad? The German Studies Professorship Program of the DAAD in North America 43
  11. Chapter 3. German Politics on the Potomac: The Foundation of the German Historical Institute and Transatlantic Exchange 63
  12. Part II. Transatlantic Academic Migration: Individual Narratives
  13. Chapter 4. Generation of 1938: The Trials and Tribulations of Teaching and Researching Modern German History in Three Academic Cultures 87
  14. Chapter 5. Inadvertent Intermediary: Becoming a German Historian in the US 104
  15. Chapter 6. Recentering a German Academic Career: From Munich and Berlin to Toronto 122
  16. Chapter 7. My Transatlantic Life: The (Mis)adventures of a Military Historian 141
  17. Chapter 8. Gender Historian by Passion, Professor and Migrant by Chance 161
  18. Chapter 9. German-American Identity and the Demise of National History 182
  19. Chapter 10. From East Berlin to West Los Angeles: An Unexpected Journey 201
  20. Chapter 11. Moving Transatlantic: Episodes, Encounters, and Experiences 221
  21. Chapter 12. Straight Outta Niederbayern: Writing Gender History on the US West Coast 240
  22. Chapter 13. Professors, Post-structuralism, and the “Postwar”: A Transnational Academic Career in the Age of Globalization 258
  23. Chapter 14. Going East and Going West: A Central Europeanist in the US 278
  24. Part III. Transatlantic Scholarship: Key Themes and Debates in Twentieth-Century German History
  25. Chapter 15. A Transatlantic “Second Repression”? Postwar Migrant Historians and Writing about National Socialism and the Holocaust 297
  26. Chapter 16. Reexamining the Transatlantic Scholarship on Modern German-Jewish History since the 1970s 317
  27. Chapter 17. Writing the History of Post-1945 Germany from Across the Atlantic: Entangled Histories and Critical Perspectives 339
  28. Appendix. List of German-Born Migrant Historians in Canada and the United States 359
  29. Selected Bibliography 379
  30. Indexes 391
Heruntergeladen am 29.4.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781805397946-024/html?lang=de
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