University of Manitoba Press
Being German Canadian
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Edited by:
About this book
Being German Canadian explores how multi-generational families and groups have interacted and shaped each other’s integration and adaptation in Canadian society, focusing on the experiences, histories, and memories of German immigrants and their descendants.
Author / Editor information
Alexander Freund is professor of History at the University of Winnipeg, where he holds the Chair in German-Canadian Studies and was a founding director of the Oral History Centre. He is the author of Oral History and Ethnic History.
Reviews
"The book offers a wide-ranging and thought-provoking exploration of the German Canadian experience, serving as a valuable resource for scholars and researchers interested in immigration, ethnicity, memory studies, Canadian history, and German Canadian history. It contributes to the ongoing dialogue on ethnocultural identity and the complexities of intergenerational memory, enriching our understanding of the diverse experiences of immigrant communities in Canada.”
Hans Werner:
“Being German Canadian is a refreshing collection of essays by seasoned academics and graduate students… Individual authors draw points of connection or divergence with other chapters with depth not often found in collections. Freund’s excellent introduction introduces us to the themes of memories and generations, which reappear in the essays that follow… The essays paint a vivid picture of how individual and collective memories continue to shape the sense of who we are, and the burden of memory—for both the glories and the failures of the past—is not unique to German Canadians.”
Barbara Lorenzkowski:
"This stimulating collection positions the history of “German Canadians” squarely in the field of migration and memory studies, making a strong case for the study of intergenerational exchanges and interactions and the salience of “generations” as an analytical concept. Memory and generation serve as the proverbial red threads that tie together the volume, lending it an admirable cohesiveness."
Wolfgang Klooß:
"The meticulously researched and detailed articles are effectively interwoven. The treatment of diverse subject matters emerges as a political and socio-historical kaleidoscope which imparts valid and inspiring insights into different facets of the ’German story of Canada’."
Matthias Zimmer:
"This collection opens the door to new horizons without discarding traditional and continuing questions of belonging and cultural heritage."
Topics
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Front Matter
i -
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Contents
v -
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Acknowledgements
vii -
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Heavy Baggage: Memory and Generation in Ethnic History
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A Flying Piano and Then—Silence: German-Canadian Memories of the Great War
36 -
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One Führer, Two Kings: A Canadian Prime Minister in Nazi Germany and the Dilemma of Responsibility
61 -
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A Transnational Yekkish Identity? Comparing German Jews in Canada and Israel
86 -
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The Roots of Ethnic Fundamentalism in German-Canadian Studies: The Case of Gottlieb Leibbrandt
112 -
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Gatekeeping in the Lutheran Church: Ethnicity, Generation, and Religion in 1960s Toronto
140 -
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Migration Trajectories and the Construction of Generational Discourses among Contemporary German Immigrants in Ottawa in the 2000s
163 -
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“We Never Really Talked About It”: Second- and Third-Generation German Canadians’ Family Memories of the Holocaust
184 -
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Creating Family Legacies: Descendants Memorialize Their German Female Ancestors
209 -
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What Does It Mean to be “German Canadian”? The Challenge of History and the Obligation of Memory
239 -
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Bibliography
251 -
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Contributors
271 -
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Index
273