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In February 1943 intermarried Germans gathered in Berlin's Rosenstrasse to protest the feared deportation of their Jewish spouses. This book examines the competing representations of the Rosenstrasse protest in contemporary Germany, demonstrating how cultural memories of this event are intertwined with each other and with concepts of identity. It analyses these shifting patterns of memory and what they reveal about the dynamics of the past-present relationship from the earliest post-unification period up to the present day. Interdisciplinary in its approach, the book provides insights into the historical debate surrounding the protest, accounts in popular history and biography, an analysis of von Trotta's 2003 film Rosenstraße, and an exploration of the multiple memorials to this historical event.
The study reveals that the protest's remembrance is fraught with competing desires: to have a less encumbered engagement with this past and to retain a critical memory of the events that allows for a recognition of both heroism and accountability. It concludes that we are on the cusp of witnessing a new shift in remembering that reflects contemporary socio-political tensions with the resurgence of the far right, noting how this is already becoming visible in existing representations of the Rosenstrasse protest.
List of contents
CONTENTS: Remembering Rosenstraße - The Rosenstraße Protest in Context - «Der eigentliche Streitwert»: The Rosenstraße Protest in Historical Debate - Changing (West) German Histories? Gernot Jochheim's Protest in der Rosenstraße - Competing Biographical Memories: Nina Schröder's Hitlers unbeugsame Gegnerinnen - From Screenplay to the Cinema Screen: Memory and Identity in Transition in Margarethe von Trotta's Rosenstraße (2003) - Memorialisation in Rosenstraße: A Microcosm of Patterns of Remembering - Multiple Layers of Memory: Looking Towards Future Remembering.
About the author
Hilary Potter holds a PhD in German Cultural Studies from the University of Bath. She teaches at the University of Leeds and previously taught at Cardiff University. Her research has also been published in the edited volume Memorialization in Germany since 1945 (2010).