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| 001 | BV005305351 | ||
| 003 | DE-70 | ||
| 005 | 20250902132857.0 | ||
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_a9781805397946 _9978-1-80539-794-6 |
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_a9781805397946 _a978-1-80539-794-6 |
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| 040 | _cRU-10907106 | ||
| 041 | _aeng | ||
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_aHagemann, Karen; Jarausch, Konrad H. _4aut _966715 |
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_aGerman Migrant Historians in North America _bTransatlantic Careers and Scholarship After 1945 _cEdited by Karen Hagemann & Konrad H. Jarausch |
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_aOxford _bBerghahn Books, Incorporated _c2024 |
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| 300 | _a504 Seiten | ||
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_2rdacontent _aText _btxt |
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_2rdamedia _aComputermedien _bbc |
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_2rdacarrier _aOnline Ressource _bcr |
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| 500 | _aE-Book / Zugriff nur im Lesesaal | ||
| 520 | _aList of IllustrationsList of AbbreviationsForewordIntroduction: German Historians and Central European History in North America after 1945Karen Hagemann and Konrad H. JarauschPart I: German (Migrant) Historians in North America Since 1945: Careers and Academic InstitutionsChapter 1. Labor Migrants, Explorers, and Academic Intermediaries: German Historians in North America since 1945Karen HagemannChapter 2. Transatlantic Mediators or Scholars Abroad?: The German Studies Professorship Program of the DAAD in North AmericaAndrea A. SinnChapter 3. German Politics on the Potomac: The Foundation of the German Historical Institute and Transatlantic ExchangeScott H. KrausePart II: Transatlantic Academic Migration: Individual NarrativesChapter 4. Generation of 1938: The Trials and Tribulations of Teaching and Researching Modern German History in Three Academic CulturesVolker BerghahnChapter 5. Inadvertent Intermediary: Becoming a German Historian in the USKonrad H. JarauschChapter 6. Recentering a German Academic Career: From Munich and Berlin to TorontoIrmgard SteinischChapter 7. My Transatlantic Life: The Mis/adventures of a Military HistorianMichael GeyerChapter 8. Gender Historian by Passion, Professor and Migrant by ChanceKaren HagemannChapter 9. German-American Identity and the Demise of National HistoriesThomas K©·uhneChapter 10. From East Berlin to West Los Angeles: An Unexpected JourneyWolf GrunerChapter 11. Moving Transatlantic: Episodes, Encounters, and ExperiencesAndreas W. DaumChapter 12. Straight Outta Niederbayern: Writing Gender History on the US West CoastUlrike StrasserChapter 13. Professors, Post-Structuralism, and the Postwar : A Transnational Academic Career in the Age of GlobalizationFrank BiessChapter 14. Going East and Going West: A Central Europeanist in the USGregor ThumPart III: Transatlantic Scholarship: Key Themes and Debates in Twentieth-Century German HistoryChapter 15. A Transatlantic Second Repression ? Postwar Migrant Historians and Writing about National Socialism and the HolocaustHelmut Walser SmithChapter 16. Reexamining the Transatlantic Scholarship on Modern German-Jewish History since the 1970sThomas Pegelow KaplanChapter 17. Writing the History of Post-1945 Germany from Across the Atlantic: Transatlantic Entangled Histories and Critical PerspecticesAnna Von Der GoltzAppendixList of German-born Migrant Historians in Canada and the United StatesSelected BibliographyIndex | ||
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_zVolltext _uhttps://doi.org/10.1515/9781805397946 |
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_c72682 _d72682 |
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