Polish Wild West

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A01=Beata Halicka
Abyssinia
Adam Zamoyski
Administrative Notifications
Adolf Hitler
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Battle of Britain
Benito Mussolini
borderland studies
Britain in World War II
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Central Poland
Concentration Camps
Danzig
Dunkirk
East Brandenburg
Eastern Borderlands
Eastern Front
Eastern Poles
ego-documents analysis
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ethnic homogenisation
Expulsion Campaign
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GIs
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Holocaust
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Japanese Invasion
Lower Silesia
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Polish German Borderlands
Polish German Relations
Polish Settlers
Polish-German's borderlands cultural appropriation
Polish-German's borderlands forced migration
political system
postwar Polish German migration case study
postwar population transfer
Poznan
Prisoners of War
Public Administration
Red Army
Second World War
social reconstruction
Soviet occupation Poland
Stalin
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The Allies
War in the Pacific
West Germany
West Pomerania
Western Front
Western Neisse
Wielkopolska Region
Wild Expulsions
Winston Churchill
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Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367457143
  • Weight: 760g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 May 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The incorporation of German territories east of the Oder and Western Neisse rivers into Poland in 1945 was linked with the difficult process of an almost total exchange of population and involved the taking over of a region in which the Second World War had effected an enormous level of destruction. The contemporary term ‘Polish Wild West’ not only alluded to the reigning atmosphere of chaos and ‘survival of the fittest’ in the Polish–German borderland but was also associated with a new kind of freedom and the opportunity to start everything anew. The arrival in this region of Polish settlers from different parts of Poland led to Poles, Germans and Soviet soldiers temporarily coming into contact with one another. Living together in this war-damaged space was far from easy.

On the basis of ego-documents, the author recreates the beginnings of the shaping of this new society, one affected by a repressive political system, internal conflicts and human tragedy. In distancing oneself from the until-recently dominant narratives concerning expellees in Germany or pioneers of the ‘Recovered Territories’ in Poland, Beata Halicka tells the story of the disintegration of a previous cultural landscape and the establishment of one which was new, in a colourful and vivid manner and encompassing different points of view.

Beata Halicka is Professor of history of Central and Eastern Europe at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland. Her book, Poland's Wild West, was published in Polish and German and received the Identities Prize 2016 for the best historical book in Poland. For more on this, please visit: http://beatahalicka.pl/

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