Die neue Ausgabe des German Historical Institute London Bulletin ist gerade erschienen und auf der Webseite des Instituts kostenlos einsehbar.
The new issue of the German Historical Institute London Bulletin is now accessible online for free via the link to the institute's website.
German-German Entangled History
Stefan Creuzberger, Dominik Geppert, and Dierk Hoffmann, How to Write the History of a Divided Nation: Germany, 1945–1990 3
Christoph Classen, Medialization in Opposing Systems: Approaching a Media History of Divided Germany 19
Jutta Braun, Learning from the Dictatorship? Sport in Divided and Unified Germany 50
Franz-Josef Meiers, Between the Blocs: The Two German States in International Politics, 1955–1990 73
Review Article
Emily A. Steinhauer, Weimar to Cold War: New Books on Twentieth-Century German Intellectual History 102
Book Reviews
Jesse Spohnholz, The Convent of Wesel: The Event that Never Was and the Invention of Tradition (Wolf-Friedrich Schäufele) 118
Douglas Moggach and Gareth Stedman Jones (eds.), The 1848 Revolutions and European Political Thought (Christos Aliprantis) 122
Volkhard Wehner, The German-Speaking Community of Victoria between 1850 and 1830: Origins, Progress and Decline (Panikos Panayi) 129
James Retallack, Red Saxony: Election Battles and the Spectre of Democracy in Germany, 1860–1918 (Stefan Berger) 134
Birthe Kundrus, ‘Dieser Krieg ist der große Rassenkrieg’: Krieg und Holocaust in Europa (Neil Gregor) 139
Astrid Zajdband, German Rabbis in British Exile: From ‘Heimat’ into the Unknown (Martina Niedhammer) 145
Conference Reports
James Krull and Karoline Müller, Movable Goods and Immovable Property: Gender, Law, and Material Culture in Early Modern Europe (1450–1850) 149
Marius S. Ostrowski, Living the German Revolution: Expectations, Experiences, Responses 155
Noticeboard 164