German Migrants in Post-War Britain

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A01=Inge Weber-Newth
A01=Johannes-Dieter Steinert
Author_Inge Weber-Newth
Author_Johannes-Dieter Steinert
brides
British Camps
British immigration policy
British Military Government
British Voluntary Organisations
British Zone
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Censuses
County War Agricultural Executive Committee
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Ethnic Germans
european
EVWs
foreign
German migrant life histories
German Migrants
German Women
germans
identity formation research
intercultural adaptation
Large Families
Lothar Kettenacker
National Joint Advisory Council
north
North Sea Scheme
oral history methodology
Panikos Panayi
Post-war
Post-war Migration
postwar migration studies
Refugee Congregation
scheme
sea
social integration Britain
sudeten
Sudeten Germans
Vice Versa
War Brides
West Germany
Westward Ho
women
worker
YMCA
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138011243
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Both timely and topical, with 2005 marking the 60th anniversary of the end of the Second World War, this unique book examines the little-known and under-researched area of German migration to Britain in the immediate post-war era. Authors Weber-Newth and Steinert analyze the political framework of post-war immigration and immigrant policy, and the complex decision-making processes that led to large-scale labour migration from the continent. They consider:

* identity, perception of self and others, stereotypes and prejudice
* how migrants dealt with language and intercultural issues
* migrants' attitudes towards national socialist and contemporary Germany
* migrants' motivation for leaving Germany
* migrants' initial experiences and their reception in Britain after the war, as recalled after 50 years in the host country, compared to their original expectations.

Based on rich British and German governmental and non-governmental archive sources, contemporary newspaper articles and nearly eighty biographically–oriented interviews with German migrants, this outstanding volume, a must-read for students and scholars in the fields of social history, sociology and migration studies, expertly encompasses political as well as social-historical questions and engages with the social, economic and cultural situation of German immigrants to Britain from a life-historical perspective.

Inge Weber-Newth is Principal Lecturer in Applied Language Studies and a member of the Research Institute for the Study of European Transformations (ISET) at London Metropolitan Unversity. Her main research interests include migration and ethnic minorities, language and identity, and biographical and collective memory.

Johannes-Dieter Steinert, Senior Research Fellow in History at the University of Wolverhampton. His main areas of research include migration and minorities, and German, British and European History.

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