Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2259367174> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 72 of
72
with 100 items per page.
- W2259367174 endingPage "232" @default.
- W2259367174 startingPage "228" @default.
- W2259367174 abstract "Reviewed by: Death at the Berlin Wall by Pertti Ahonen, and: Behind the Berlin Wall: East Germany and the Frontiers of Power by Patrick Major Astrid M. Eckert Death at the Berlin Wall. By Pertti Ahonen. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. Pp. 309. Cloth $115.00. ISBN 978-0199546305. Behind the Berlin Wall: East Germany and the Frontiers of Power. By Patrick Major. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010. Pp. xii + 321. Paper $45.00. ISBN 978-0199605101. The recent anniversaries related to the Berlin Wall—twenty years since its fall in 1989 and fifty years since its construction in 1961—have generated several new publications [End Page 228] about the infamous edifice, both in German and in English. Pertti Ahonen and Patrick Major contribute to this literature respectively by analyzing the human tragedies caused by the GDR’s border regime (Ahonen) and by exploring the “invisible frontiers of power staked out behind the literal walls” (Major, 4). Ahonen reads the Wall and its victims as a barometer of inter-German relations and shows how both German states instrumentalized the border, and those who died in its shadow, in their Cold War competition for political legitimacy. Major, by contrast, focuses exclusively on the GDR and charts the consequences of the border—first open, then closed—for the lives of ordinary East Germans. The Berlin Wall, argues Ahonen, constituted the focal point of the propaganda war between the two German states. The need of Walter Ulbricht’s government to build such a monstrosity in order to stop the ongoing hemorrhage of its population gave the West Germans an instant leg up in the competition for political prestige, both at home and abroad. Nazi analogies, depicting the GDR as a huge concentration camp, were quickly drawn to discredit the socialist rival. East German authorities, for the most part in reactive mode, did their best to return the favor by justifying the building of the Wall as a last-ditch effort to thwart western preparations for military aggression. As incompatible as the western and eastern Wall narratives remained, Ahonen points to their “striking similiarities in content and objectives” (26), as both aimed to mobilize intangible resources such as prestige and legitimacy. Those who died at the Wall were invariably drawn into these publicity battles. The victims were not only East Germans trying to escape the GDR but also West Berliners who had accidentally infringed upon East Berlin territory, GDR border guards caught in the crossfire (at times their own), and one child who drowned in a border canal. For the West German side, any civilian harmed by East German border guards constituted “the strongest potential trump” (41) over the GDR. Conversely, any such case was a publicity disaster for East Berlin. From the first fatal shooting, the GDR developed strategies to minimize its vulnerability. The primary objective was a cover-up: officials fabricated a course of events for public consumption and even government files, kept the names of the victims anonymous, spread lies about them, and harassed the families into silence. This worked least well when western observers had witnessed the crime, as in the case of Peter Fechter, who bled to death in plain view of western cameras near Checkpoint Charlie. As Ahonen shows, the lack of assistance for a wounded escapee was not an isolated incident but rather a consequence of the priority given to covering up what had transpired. For example, the escapee Michael-Horst Schmidt died in November 1984 because no one tended to his injuries. For GDR officials Schmidt was “mere collateral damage” (230). Cover-ups could be utterly successful, as in the case of Dieter Beilig. The West Berliner had scaled the Wall in reverse direction in some hot-headed protest action in 1971. He was shot while already in GDR custody, and his corpse simply disappeared [End Page 229] without a trace. On the western side, he remained one of many missing person cases until after 1990 and the opening of the East German archives. In view of this patent disregard for the victims’ humanity and because of the posthumous character assassinations, Ahonen made another aim of his book the restoration of “a face and at least..." @default.
- W2259367174 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2259367174 creator A5020747314 @default.
- W2259367174 date "2013-02-01" @default.
- W2259367174 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2259367174 title "Death at the Berlin Wall by Pertti Ahonen, and: Behind the Berlin Wall: East Germany and the Frontiers of Power by Patrick Major (review)" @default.
- W2259367174 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/gsr.2013.a501340" @default.
- W2259367174 hasPublicationYear "2013" @default.
- W2259367174 type Work @default.
- W2259367174 sameAs 2259367174 @default.
- W2259367174 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2259367174 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2259367174 hasAuthorship W2259367174A5020747314 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C10138342 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C113522999 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C117797892 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C154775046 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C163258240 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C182306322 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C2994405062 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C52119013 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C542102704 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C62520636 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C6303427 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C10138342 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C113522999 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C117797892 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C121332964 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C154775046 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C15744967 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C162324750 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C163258240 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C166957645 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C17744445 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C182306322 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C199539241 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C2994405062 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C52119013 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C542102704 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C62520636 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C6303427 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C94625758 @default.
- W2259367174 hasConceptScore W2259367174C95457728 @default.
- W2259367174 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W2259367174 hasLocation W22593671741 @default.
- W2259367174 hasOpenAccess W2259367174 @default.
- W2259367174 hasPrimaryLocation W22593671741 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W1571573910 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W2002514233 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W2070764034 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W2088333460 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W2100605575 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W2606393238 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W3107832011 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W4321258963 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W616645843 @default.
- W2259367174 hasRelatedWork W653564025 @default.
- W2259367174 hasVolume "36" @default.
- W2259367174 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2259367174 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2259367174 magId "2259367174" @default.
- W2259367174 workType "article" @default.