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Chapter 12 WHAT DOES DEMOCRACY LOOK LIKE? (AND WHY WOULD ANYONE WANT TO BUY IT?) Third World Demands and West German Responses at 1960s World Youth Festivals
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ILLUSTRATIONS ix
- EUROPEAN COLD WAR CULTURE(S)? An Introduction 1
-
Part I MEDIATING THE COLD WAR Radio, Film, Television, and Literature
- Chapter 1 EAST EUROPEAN COLD WAR CULTURE(S) Alterities, Commonalities, and Film Industries 23
- Chapter 2 “WE STARTED THE COLD WAR” A Hidden Message behind Stalin’s Attack on Anna Akhmatova 55
- Chapter 3 RADIO REFORM IN THE 1980S RIAS and DT-64 Respond to Private Radio 76
- Chapter 4 THE ENEMY WITHIN (De)Dramatizing the Cold War in U.S. and West German Spy TV from the 1960s 94
- Chapter 5 COLD WAR TELEVISION Olga Korbut and the Munich Olympics of 1972 112
-
Part II CONSTRUCTING IDENTITIES Representations of the “Self”
- Chapter 6 CATHOLIC PIETY IN THE EARLY COLD WAR YEARS, OR How the Virgin Mary Protected the West from Communism 129
- Chapter 7 THE ROAD TO SOCIALISM PAVED WITH GOOD INTENTIONS Automobile Culture in the Soviet Union, Romania, and the GDR During Détente 152
- Chapter 8 ADVERTISING, EMOTIONS, AND “HIDDEN PERSUADERS” The Making of Cold-War Consumer Culture in Britain from the 1940s to the 1960s 172
- Chapter 9 SURVIVAL IN THE WELFARE COCOON The Culture of Civil Defense in Cold War Sweden 191
-
Part III CROSSING THE BORDER Interactions with the “Other”
- Chapter 10 THE PEACE AND THE WAR CAMPS The Dichotomous Cold War Culture in Czechoslovakia: 1948–1960 213
- Chapter 11 ARTISTIC STYLE, CANONIZATION, AND IDENTITY POLITICS IN COLD WAR GERMANY, 1947–1960 235
- Chapter 12 WHAT DOES DEMOCRACY LOOK LIKE? (AND WHY WOULD ANYONE WANT TO BUY IT?) Third World Demands and West German Responses at 1960s World Youth Festivals 254
- Chapter 13 DRAWING THE EAST-WEST BORDER Narratives of Modernity and Identity in the Northeastern Adriatic (1947–1954) 276
-
Part IV THE LEGACIES OF THE COLD WAR Remembrance and Historiography
- Chapter 14 A 1950S REVIVAL Cold War Culture in Reunified Germany 299
- Chapter 15 THE MIKSON CASE War Crimes Memory, Estonian Identity Reconstructions, and the Transnational Politics of Justice 321
- Chapter 16 THE FIRST COLD WAR MEMORIAL IN BERLIN A Short Inquiry into Europe, the Cold War, and Memory Cultures 347
- NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 370
- INDEX 374
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ILLUSTRATIONS ix
- EUROPEAN COLD WAR CULTURE(S)? An Introduction 1
-
Part I MEDIATING THE COLD WAR Radio, Film, Television, and Literature
- Chapter 1 EAST EUROPEAN COLD WAR CULTURE(S) Alterities, Commonalities, and Film Industries 23
- Chapter 2 “WE STARTED THE COLD WAR” A Hidden Message behind Stalin’s Attack on Anna Akhmatova 55
- Chapter 3 RADIO REFORM IN THE 1980S RIAS and DT-64 Respond to Private Radio 76
- Chapter 4 THE ENEMY WITHIN (De)Dramatizing the Cold War in U.S. and West German Spy TV from the 1960s 94
- Chapter 5 COLD WAR TELEVISION Olga Korbut and the Munich Olympics of 1972 112
-
Part II CONSTRUCTING IDENTITIES Representations of the “Self”
- Chapter 6 CATHOLIC PIETY IN THE EARLY COLD WAR YEARS, OR How the Virgin Mary Protected the West from Communism 129
- Chapter 7 THE ROAD TO SOCIALISM PAVED WITH GOOD INTENTIONS Automobile Culture in the Soviet Union, Romania, and the GDR During Détente 152
- Chapter 8 ADVERTISING, EMOTIONS, AND “HIDDEN PERSUADERS” The Making of Cold-War Consumer Culture in Britain from the 1940s to the 1960s 172
- Chapter 9 SURVIVAL IN THE WELFARE COCOON The Culture of Civil Defense in Cold War Sweden 191
-
Part III CROSSING THE BORDER Interactions with the “Other”
- Chapter 10 THE PEACE AND THE WAR CAMPS The Dichotomous Cold War Culture in Czechoslovakia: 1948–1960 213
- Chapter 11 ARTISTIC STYLE, CANONIZATION, AND IDENTITY POLITICS IN COLD WAR GERMANY, 1947–1960 235
- Chapter 12 WHAT DOES DEMOCRACY LOOK LIKE? (AND WHY WOULD ANYONE WANT TO BUY IT?) Third World Demands and West German Responses at 1960s World Youth Festivals 254
- Chapter 13 DRAWING THE EAST-WEST BORDER Narratives of Modernity and Identity in the Northeastern Adriatic (1947–1954) 276
-
Part IV THE LEGACIES OF THE COLD WAR Remembrance and Historiography
- Chapter 14 A 1950S REVIVAL Cold War Culture in Reunified Germany 299
- Chapter 15 THE MIKSON CASE War Crimes Memory, Estonian Identity Reconstructions, and the Transnational Politics of Justice 321
- Chapter 16 THE FIRST COLD WAR MEMORIAL IN BERLIN A Short Inquiry into Europe, the Cold War, and Memory Cultures 347
- NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 370
- INDEX 374