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Resettlers and Survivors

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Located on the border of present-day Romania and Ukraine, the historical region of Bukovina was the site of widespread displacement and violence as it passed from Romanian to Soviet hands and bac...
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  • 09 April 2020
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Located on the border of present-day Romania and Ukraine, the historical region of Bukovina was the site of widespread displacement and violence as it passed from Romanian to Soviet hands and back again during World War II. This study focuses on two groups of “Bukovinians”—ethnic Germans and German-speaking Jews—as they navigated dramatically changed political and social circumstances in and after 1945. Through comparisons of the narratives and self-conceptions of these groups, Resettlers and Survivors gives a nuanced account of how they dealt with the difficult legacies of World War II, while exploring Bukovina’s significance for them as both a geographical location and a “place of memory.”

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Price: £104.00
Pages: 304
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Imprint: Berghahn Books
Series: Worlds of Memory
Publication Date: 09 April 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781789206678
Format: Hardcover
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“This book makes a significant contribution to the field of German-Jewish history after the Shoah. Fisher's focus on Germans and Jews from a particular Central European region proves fruitful for studying the negotiation of postwar belonging in both a comparative and an entangled perspective…This book gives an important impulse to think further about the continuous entanglement of German and Jewish histories from a historical Central European vantage point, without endorsing all-too-jubilant rediscoveries of ‘German-Jewish symbiosis.’" • AJS Review: The Journal of the Association for Jewish Studies

“The strength of Fisher’s book lies in her detailed and insightful analysis of how Jewish and Christian German speakers from Bukovina imagined their past and present German identities. Studying the two groups in tandem illuminates not only their respective worlds but also the very contested meaning of identity, homeland, and belonging.” • Histoire Sociale/Social History

“By establishing a new approach for Bukovina research, Resettlers and Survivors makes the reverberations of World War II visible for Europe as a whole and particularly for Bukovina Germans and Jews. It offers answers to how and why their experiences effected new conceptualizations of the past, of identity, and of home.” • Markus Winkler, LMU Munich

“Gaëlle Fisher manages, on the one hand, to provide insight into a lesser-known episode in the history of World War II. At the same time, through her own interpretation of the historical record, she illustrates through this special case a theoretical issue relevant to the concepts essential for a sociopolitical understanding of modernity and postmodernity: identity, alterity, difference, space, place, and memory.” • Andrei Corbea-Hoişie, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, Iași, Romania

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Part I: Backgrounds

Chapter 1. Being Bukovinian before 1945: German and Jewish Bukovinians in the Habsburg Empire, Romania and the Second World War

Part II: Establishments

Chapter 2. ‘Settling in the Motherland’: ‘Resettlers’ from Bukovina in West Germany after the Second World War
Chapter 3. ‘A Remarkable Branch of the Jewish People’: Survivors from Bukovina between Romania and Israel after the Second World War

Part III: Entanglements

Chapter 4. ‘Lost Home’ and ‘Area of Expulsion’: Compensating for Loss at the Height of the Cold War
Chapter 5. ‘Sunken Cultural Landscape’: Reimagining Bukovina through the Lens of Literature

Conclusion
Bibliography
Index