Divided Village: The Cold War in the German Borderlands

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A01=Jason B. Johnson
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Bavarian Side
Border Troops
borderland communities
Borderland Villages
Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=HBLW3
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Category=JP
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Cold War Europe
Collectivization Drive
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DDR
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Demarcation Line
Divided Village
divided village case study
East German
East German Border
East German Police
East German society
East Germany
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GDR
GDR Border
GDR Regime
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GDR State
Gera District
German Democratic Republic
German history
Iron Curtain
Iron Curtain studies
Language_English
Local Collective Farm
Modlareuth
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rural militarisation
SED
SED Leadership
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SED Party
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Soviet Zone
Stasi
Wall's Construction
Wall’s Construction
West German
West Germany
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415793773
  • Weight: 644g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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In 1983, then-US Vice President George H.W. Bush delivered a speech in London. He had just been in West Berlin and spoke about his first visit to the Berlin Wall. Bush then went on to describe another German wall he saw after Berlin: "if anything, that wall was an even greater obscenity than its eponym to the north."

The story of that wall is a fascinating and valuable slice of the history of post-war Europe. That wall had gone up nearly two hundred miles southwest of Berlin at the edge of divided Germany, in the tiny, remote farming village of Mödlareuth. For nearly half the twentieth century, the Iron Curtain divided Mödlareuth in two. In this little valley surrounded by forests and fields, the villagers of Mödlareuth found themselves on the literal front-line of the Cold War. The East German state gradually militarized the border through the community while eastern villagers exhibited a range of responses to cope with their changing circumstances, reflective of the variable nature of the Cold War border through Germany: along the Iron Curtain, the size and isolation of the divided place influenced the local character of the division.

Jason B. Johnson is Assistant Professor in the Department of History, Trinity University, USA.

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