Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany
Herausgeber: Harvey, Elizabeth; Umbach, Maiken; Hürter, Johannes
Private Life and Privacy in Nazi Germany
Herausgeber: Harvey, Elizabeth; Umbach, Maiken; Hürter, Johannes
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It is often assumed that there was no such thing as private life under Nazi rule. This volume challenges that view by showing how non-Jewish Germans asserted their privacy and asking how far the regime encouraged such aspirations. At the same time, it traces how 'ethnic Germans' and Jews in occupied Poland sought to defend their privacy.
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It is often assumed that there was no such thing as private life under Nazi rule. This volume challenges that view by showing how non-Jewish Germans asserted their privacy and asking how far the regime encouraged such aspirations. At the same time, it traces how 'ethnic Germans' and Jews in occupied Poland sought to defend their privacy.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 412
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 606g
- ISBN-13: 9781108719032
- ISBN-10: 1108719031
- Artikelnr.: 59643830
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 412
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 606g
- ISBN-13: 9781108719032
- ISBN-10: 1108719031
- Artikelnr.: 59643830
Part I. Interpreting the Private under National Socialism: New Approaches:
1. Introduction: reconsidering private life under the Nazi dictatorship
Elizabeth Harvey, Johannes Hürter, Maiken Umbach and Andreas Wirsching; 2.
A particular kind of privacy: accessing 'the private' in national socialism
Janosch Steuwer; 3. Private lives, public faces: on the social self in Nazi
Germany Mary Fulbrook; 4. Private and public moral sentiments in Nazi
Germany Nicholas Stargardt; 5. (Re-)inventing the private under national
socialism Maiken Umbach; Part II. The Private in the Volksgemeinschaft: 6.
Private life in the people's economy: spending and saving in Nazi Germany
Pamela E. Swett; 7. 'Hoist the flag!': flags as a sign of political
consensus and distance in the Nazi period Karl Christian Führer; 8. The
vulnerable dwelling: local privacy before the courts Annemone Christians;
9. Walther von Hollander as an advice columnist on marriage and the family
in the Third Reich Lu Seegers; Part III. The Private at War: 10. Personal
relationships between harmony and alienation: aspects of home leave during
the Second World War Christian Packheiser; 11. Working on the relationship:
exchanging letters, goods, and photographs in wartime Andrew Stuart
Bergerson, Laura Fahnenbruck and Christine Hartig; 12. Love letters from
front and home: a private space for intimacy Cornelie Usborne; 13. 'A birth
is nothing out of the ordinary here ...': mothers, midwives and the private
sphere in the 'Reichsgau Wartheland' 1939-1945 Wiebke Lisner; 14.
Transformations of the 'private': proximity and distance in the spatial
confinement of the ghettos in occupied Poland 1939-1942 Carlos A. Haas.
1. Introduction: reconsidering private life under the Nazi dictatorship
Elizabeth Harvey, Johannes Hürter, Maiken Umbach and Andreas Wirsching; 2.
A particular kind of privacy: accessing 'the private' in national socialism
Janosch Steuwer; 3. Private lives, public faces: on the social self in Nazi
Germany Mary Fulbrook; 4. Private and public moral sentiments in Nazi
Germany Nicholas Stargardt; 5. (Re-)inventing the private under national
socialism Maiken Umbach; Part II. The Private in the Volksgemeinschaft: 6.
Private life in the people's economy: spending and saving in Nazi Germany
Pamela E. Swett; 7. 'Hoist the flag!': flags as a sign of political
consensus and distance in the Nazi period Karl Christian Führer; 8. The
vulnerable dwelling: local privacy before the courts Annemone Christians;
9. Walther von Hollander as an advice columnist on marriage and the family
in the Third Reich Lu Seegers; Part III. The Private at War: 10. Personal
relationships between harmony and alienation: aspects of home leave during
the Second World War Christian Packheiser; 11. Working on the relationship:
exchanging letters, goods, and photographs in wartime Andrew Stuart
Bergerson, Laura Fahnenbruck and Christine Hartig; 12. Love letters from
front and home: a private space for intimacy Cornelie Usborne; 13. 'A birth
is nothing out of the ordinary here ...': mothers, midwives and the private
sphere in the 'Reichsgau Wartheland' 1939-1945 Wiebke Lisner; 14.
Transformations of the 'private': proximity and distance in the spatial
confinement of the ghettos in occupied Poland 1939-1942 Carlos A. Haas.
Part I. Interpreting the Private under National Socialism: New Approaches:
1. Introduction: reconsidering private life under the Nazi dictatorship
Elizabeth Harvey, Johannes Hürter, Maiken Umbach and Andreas Wirsching; 2.
A particular kind of privacy: accessing 'the private' in national socialism
Janosch Steuwer; 3. Private lives, public faces: on the social self in Nazi
Germany Mary Fulbrook; 4. Private and public moral sentiments in Nazi
Germany Nicholas Stargardt; 5. (Re-)inventing the private under national
socialism Maiken Umbach; Part II. The Private in the Volksgemeinschaft: 6.
Private life in the people's economy: spending and saving in Nazi Germany
Pamela E. Swett; 7. 'Hoist the flag!': flags as a sign of political
consensus and distance in the Nazi period Karl Christian Führer; 8. The
vulnerable dwelling: local privacy before the courts Annemone Christians;
9. Walther von Hollander as an advice columnist on marriage and the family
in the Third Reich Lu Seegers; Part III. The Private at War: 10. Personal
relationships between harmony and alienation: aspects of home leave during
the Second World War Christian Packheiser; 11. Working on the relationship:
exchanging letters, goods, and photographs in wartime Andrew Stuart
Bergerson, Laura Fahnenbruck and Christine Hartig; 12. Love letters from
front and home: a private space for intimacy Cornelie Usborne; 13. 'A birth
is nothing out of the ordinary here ...': mothers, midwives and the private
sphere in the 'Reichsgau Wartheland' 1939-1945 Wiebke Lisner; 14.
Transformations of the 'private': proximity and distance in the spatial
confinement of the ghettos in occupied Poland 1939-1942 Carlos A. Haas.
1. Introduction: reconsidering private life under the Nazi dictatorship
Elizabeth Harvey, Johannes Hürter, Maiken Umbach and Andreas Wirsching; 2.
A particular kind of privacy: accessing 'the private' in national socialism
Janosch Steuwer; 3. Private lives, public faces: on the social self in Nazi
Germany Mary Fulbrook; 4. Private and public moral sentiments in Nazi
Germany Nicholas Stargardt; 5. (Re-)inventing the private under national
socialism Maiken Umbach; Part II. The Private in the Volksgemeinschaft: 6.
Private life in the people's economy: spending and saving in Nazi Germany
Pamela E. Swett; 7. 'Hoist the flag!': flags as a sign of political
consensus and distance in the Nazi period Karl Christian Führer; 8. The
vulnerable dwelling: local privacy before the courts Annemone Christians;
9. Walther von Hollander as an advice columnist on marriage and the family
in the Third Reich Lu Seegers; Part III. The Private at War: 10. Personal
relationships between harmony and alienation: aspects of home leave during
the Second World War Christian Packheiser; 11. Working on the relationship:
exchanging letters, goods, and photographs in wartime Andrew Stuart
Bergerson, Laura Fahnenbruck and Christine Hartig; 12. Love letters from
front and home: a private space for intimacy Cornelie Usborne; 13. 'A birth
is nothing out of the ordinary here ...': mothers, midwives and the private
sphere in the 'Reichsgau Wartheland' 1939-1945 Wiebke Lisner; 14.
Transformations of the 'private': proximity and distance in the spatial
confinement of the ghettos in occupied Poland 1939-1942 Carlos A. Haas.