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Index
Book Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
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Introduction: German Colonialism and National Identity
Part I Colonialism From Before the Empire
1 Imperialism, Race, and Genocide at the Paulskirche: Origins, Meanings, Trajectories
2 Time, Identity and Colonialism in German Travel Writing on Africa, 1848–1914
3 Gray Zones: On the Inclusion of “Poland” in the Study of German Colonialism
Part II Colonialism and Popular Utterance in the Imperial Phase
4 The War That Scarcely Was: The Berliner Morgenpost and the Boxer Uprising
5 Boy’s and Girl’s Own Empires: Gender and the Uses of the Colonial World in Kaiserreich Youth Magazines
6 Picturing Genocide in German Consumer Culture, 1904–10
7 The Visual Representation of Blackness During German Imperialism Around 1900
8 Colonialism and the Simplification of Language: Germany’s Kolonial-Deutsch Experiment
Part III Colonialism and the End of Empire
9 Fraternity, Frenzy, and Genocide in German War Literature, 1906–36
10 Colonial Heroes: German Colonial Identities in Wartime, 1914–18
11 Crossing Boundaries: German Women in Africa, 1919–33
12 Abuses of German Colonial History: The Character of Carl Peters as a Weapon for völkisch and National Socialist Discourses: Anglophobia, Anti-Semitism, Aryanism
13 “Loyal Askari” and “Black Rapist”: Two Images in the German Discourse on National Identity and Their Impact on the Lives of Black People in Germany, 1918–45
Part IV German Colonialism in the Era of Decolonization
14 (Post-) Colonial Amnesia?: German Debates on Colonialism and Decolonization in the Post-War Era
15 Denkmalsturz: The German Student Movement and German Colonialism
16 Vergangenheitsbewältigung à la française: Post-Colonial Memories of the Herero Genocide and 17 October 1961
17 The Persistence of Fantasies: Colonialism as Melodrama on German Television
Part V Local Histories, Memories, Legacies
18 Communal Memory Events and the Heritage of the Victims: The Persistence of the Theme of Genocide in Namibia
19 The Genocide in “German South-West Africa” and the Politics of Commemoration: How (Not) to Come to Terms with the Past
20 The Struggle for Genocidal Exclusivity: The Perception of the Murder of the Namibian Herero (1904–8) in the Age of a New International Morality
21 Narratives of a “Model Colony”: German Togoland in Written and Oral Histories
22 Suspended Between Worlds?: The Discipline of Germanistik in Sub-Saharan Africa
Bibliography
Index
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