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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Highlights the surprising ways in which the Nazi regime permitted or even fostered aspirations of privacy.
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Highlights the surprising ways in which the Nazi regime permitted or even fostered aspirations of privacy.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 412
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 747g
- ISBN-13: 9781108484985
- ISBN-10: 1108484980
- Artikelnr.: 55318589
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 412
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 747g
- ISBN-13: 9781108484985
- ISBN-10: 1108484980
- Artikelnr.: 55318589
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.