From Cold War battleground to a footnote to history? Labour history in divided and unified Germany
Research output: Contribution to journal › Research article › Contributed › peer-review
Contributors
Abstract
History of labor and industrial relations was a well-established and mutually contested subdiscipline in both parts of Germany during the Cold War. Though it did not stand in the center of the overall settling of accounts with the communist past in unified Germany the swift opening of all relevant archival sources made sure that these themes established themselves as relevant topics on the research agenda about the history of the GDR. Profiting both from an advanced state of art in West Germany and a handful of original innovators in East Germany the GDR was explored and increasingly understood as an essentially ‘work-centered society’ governed by a panoptic ‘welfare dictatorship’. When it came to interpreting the multifold and heterogeneous findings one line of reasoning gained peculiar attractiveness, namely to read the East German ‘case’ as a variant of Fordist modernization in the middle of the twentieth century which unable to face the challenges of globalization.
Details
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 61-78 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | European review of history = Revue européenne d'histoire |
Volume | 25 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2 Jan 2018 |
Peer-reviewed | Yes |
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Keywords
- communism, History of historiography, labour history, post-communism