The Diplomacy of Wiedergutmachung : Memory, the Cold War, and the Western European Victims of Nazism, 1956-1964

TitleThe Diplomacy of Wiedergutmachung : Memory, the Cold War, and the Western European Victims of Nazism, 1956-1964
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2003
AuthorsSusanna Schrafstetter
JournalHolocaust and Genocide Studies
Volume17
Issue3
Pagination459-479
ISSN1476-7937
Abstract

Abstract In 1956 a number of Western European states demanded from the Federal Republic of Germany compensation for victims of National Socialist persecution. West Germany eventually concluded eleven bilateral compensation agreements between 1959 and 1964. The long, acrimonious negotiations were conducted with the Federal Republic's key allies at a time when their support was crucial for West Germany's international rehabilitation, the process of European integration, and the Cold War struggle. This article analyzes to what extent the day-to-day politics of the Cold War were intertwined with the politics of the past. It examines German negotiations with France and with Britain in more detail to illustrate that the eleven agreements were far from uniform.

URLhttp://muse.jhu.edu/journals/holocaust_and_genocide_studies/v017/17.3schrafstetter.html
Short TitleThe Diplomacy of Wiedergutmachung
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