Buch, Englisch, 336 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 502 g
Reihe: German life and civilization
Germany, Nature, and the Left in History, Politics, and Culture
Buch, Englisch, 336 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 502 g
Reihe: German life and civilization
ISBN: 978-1-78707-577-1
Verlag: Peter Lang
that structure the interactions between environmentalism, nature, and socialism in German history and culture can be said to constitute a kind of ecology – a complex and interdependent web of relations, which can appear as antagonisms, but which can also contain deeper, less immediately visible, interdependencies. attempts to combine the work of scholars from a wide range of disciplines (history, literature, German/Austrian studies, philosophy, geography) in order to contribute to a better and more nuanced understanding of how «green» and «red» have clashed and also merged in German history and culture.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
CONTENTS: Eli Rubin/Scott Moranda: Introduction – Scott Moranda: A Garden of Small Plots or Factory Farms? Early Cold War Agricultural Planning in East Germany – Tobias Huff: Environmental Policy in the GDR: Principles, Restrictions, Failure, and Legacy – Astrid Mignon Kirchhof: Counterworlds: The Pioneers of Nature Conservation and Life Reform in East Germany – Michel Dupuy: Justifying Air Pollution in the GDR, 1949–1989 – Gernot Waldner: Ecology and its Discontents: The Concept of Nature in Elfriede Jelinek’s Oh Wildnis, oh Schutz vor ihr –Eli Rubin: The Greens, the Left, and the GDR: A Critical Reassessment – Julie Ault: Aquatic Conundrums: The GDR’s Water Woes and Soviet Bloc Cooperation, 1963–1989 – Thomas Fleischman: The Half-Life of State Socialism: What Radioactive Wild Boars Tell Us About the Environmental History of Reunified Germany – Christina Schwenkel: Shrinking Green Cities: Trees and the Afterlife of Eco-Socialist Planning in Vietnam – Katrina Nousek: “Zweige, Nadeln, Dreck”: Dwelling on the Social in SimpleStorys by Ingo Schulze – Bettina Stoetzer: Wildes Brandenburg: Engaging “Unruly Nature” in Berlin’s Peripheries