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The Reunification Nobody Planned: Germany's Chaotic Transformation: How Ordinary Germans Navigated Economic Collapse, Identity Crisis, and Institutional Failure, 1989–1999
Coles
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The Reunification Nobody Planned: Germany's Chaotic Transformation: How Ordinary Germans Navigated Economic Collapse, Identity Crisis, and Institutional Failure, 1989–1999 in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $14.99


By None
The Reunification Nobody Planned: Germany's Chaotic Transformation: How Ordinary Germans Navigated Economic Collapse, Identity Crisis, and Institutional Failure, 1989–1999 in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $14.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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German reunification is remembered as a triumph of democracy, but for millions it meant unemployment, cultural erasure, and the sudden collapse of every institution they had known. This book traces how East and West Germans experienced the decade after the Wall fell in 1989, moving beyond official narratives to examine the workers who lost careers overnight, families divided by economic migration, and communities struggling to reconcile incompatible memories of the same country. Drawing on personal testimonies, Treuhand archives, social research data, and local government records, the narrative follows reunification through the eyes of those who lived it: Leipzig factory workers facing privatization, West German administrators imposing unfamiliar systems, small-town mayors managing social disintegration, and young people caught between nostalgia for the GDR and promises of prosperity that never materialized for many. The book explores how the Treuhand's rushed privatization destroyed East German industry while enriching West German investors, how welfare systems collapsed under pressure from mass unemployment, and how different historical experiences—antifascism versus Vergangenheitsbewältigung, socialist workplace culture versus market competition—created misunderstandings that persist today. It examines the emergence of Ostalgie as both genuine loss and political manipulation, and how reunification's failures contributed to contemporary right-wing populism in former East Germany. Relevant for readers interested in how rapid systemic change affects ordinary lives, how economic transformation creates lasting social divisions, and why official success stories often conceal institutional failures and human costs.
German reunification is remembered as a triumph of democracy, but for millions it meant unemployment, cultural erasure, and the sudden collapse of every institution they had known. This book traces how East and West Germans experienced the decade after the Wall fell in 1989, moving beyond official narratives to examine the workers who lost careers overnight, families divided by economic migration, and communities struggling to reconcile incompatible memories of the same country. Drawing on personal testimonies, Treuhand archives, social research data, and local government records, the narrative follows reunification through the eyes of those who lived it: Leipzig factory workers facing privatization, West German administrators imposing unfamiliar systems, small-town mayors managing social disintegration, and young people caught between nostalgia for the GDR and promises of prosperity that never materialized for many. The book explores how the Treuhand's rushed privatization destroyed East German industry while enriching West German investors, how welfare systems collapsed under pressure from mass unemployment, and how different historical experiences—antifascism versus Vergangenheitsbewältigung, socialist workplace culture versus market competition—created misunderstandings that persist today. It examines the emergence of Ostalgie as both genuine loss and political manipulation, and how reunification's failures contributed to contemporary right-wing populism in former East Germany. Relevant for readers interested in how rapid systemic change affects ordinary lives, how economic transformation creates lasting social divisions, and why official success stories often conceal institutional failures and human costs.

















