After the Event: The Transmission of Grievous Loss in Germany, China and TaiwanTwo of the most destructive moments of state violence in the twentieth century occurred in Europe between 1933 and 1945 and in China between 1959 and 1961 (the Great Leap famine). This is the first book to bring the two histories together in order to examine their differences and to understand if there are any similar processes of transmission at work. The author expertly ties in the Taiwanese civil war between Nationalists and Communists, which included the White Terror from 1947 to 1987, a less well-known but equally revealing part of twentieth-century history. Personal and family stories are told, often in the individual’s own words, and then compared with the public accounts of the same events as found in official histories, commemorations, school textbooks and other forms of public memory. The author presents innovative and constructive criticisms of social memory theories in order to make sense both of what happened and how what happened is transmitted. |
Contents
3 | |
20 | |
Official Transmission of the Great Leap Famine and of the White Terror | 43 |
Part I The Great Leap Famine | 69 |
Chapter 4 Moral and Political Dilemmas from the Great Leap Famine | 71 |
The Generation Gap after the Great Leap Famine | 92 |
Part II The Luku Incident of the White Terror | 111 |
Chapter 6 Disruption Commemoration and Family Repair in Taiwan | 113 |
Part III The Third Reich | 151 |
Chapter 8 Acknowledgement of the Third Reich in Postwar Germany | 153 |
Some Jewish German Families | 174 |
Some German German Families | 190 |
Conclusion | 207 |
Chapter 11 Beyond Bad Death | 209 |
References | 228 |
235 | |
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After the Event: The Transmission of Grievous Loss in Germany, China and Taiwan Stephan Feuchtwang No preview available - 2011 |