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GERMAN EDUCATION 1945-2014 Ann Abney, Master of Arts in History, 2016 Thes PDF

139 Pages·2016·0.74 MB·English
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ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: SOMEONE ELSE’S TEXTBOOKS: GERMAN EDUCATION 1945-2014 Ann Abney, Master of Arts in History, 2016 Thesis Directed By: Professor Piotr Kosicki, Department of History In the 20th century, German education repeatedly transformed as the occupying Americans, Soviets, and western-dominated reunification governments used their control of the German secondary education system to create new definitions of what it meant to be German. In each case, the dominant political force established the paradigm for a new generation of Germans. The victors altered the German education system to ensure that their versions of history would be the prevailing narrative. In the American Occupation Zones from 1945-1949, this meant democratic initiatives; for the Soviet Zone in those same years, Marxist-Leninist pedagogy; and for the Bundesrepublik after reunification, integrated East and West German narratives. In practice, this meant succeeding generations of German students learned very different versions of history depending on the temporal and geographic space they inhabited, as each new prevailing regime supplanted the previous version of “Germanness” with its own. SOMEONE ELSE’S TEXTBOOKS: GERMAN EDUCATION 1945-2014 by Ann Abney Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts in History 2016 Advisory Committee: Professor Piotr Kosicki, Chair Professor Jeffrey Herf Professor Marsha Rozenblit Professor James H. Williams © Copyright by Ann Abney 2016 Dedication Dedicated to Dr. Hendrix and Maggie – For believing that I could do this long before I did ii Acknowledgements This thesis was a journey that began, naturally, with a book. But it ended with people, and those are the ones that deserve all the thanks. Thanks first go to my advisor, Dr. Piotr Kosicki, who shepherded this project from the bare bones idea to a full draft and beyond. His comments and patience have helped me immensely both with this project, and my own growth as a scholar. To the staff at the Georg Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research and the Bundesarchiv in Berlin-Litcherfelde, thank you for sharing your treasures with me. To Andi Vlaicu at the National Archives at College Park, Maryland, thank you for sharing your desk and cart with me when I spent time researching with RG 260. Infinite thanks for putting up with my endless prattle about the thesis process and the newest discovery I made. To my friends at NARA, Sara, Cliff, and Philip, thank you for listening to me when I was ready to give up, and reminding me that there would be a light at the end of the tunnel. And thanks for distracting me with talk of record groups, preservation concerns, and anything other than my thesis. To Merle and Saskia, for your patience in explaining the German education system over and over again to me, for helping with tricky translations, and being a refreshing break from my research trip in Summer 2015. To Dr. Scott Hendrix – thank you for always encouraging me to reach. Thank you for being there as a sounding board and a confidence booster. I would not be the scholar I am today without your guidance. The world needs more professors like you. Finally, to my sister, Maggie Roberts – thank you for going through this process first and knowing when I needed Reese’s and when I needed a kick in the butt and everything in between. iii Table of Contents Dedication ..................................................................................................................... ii Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................... iii Table of Contents ......................................................................................................... iv List of Tables ............................................................................................................... vi List of Figures ............................................................................................................. vii Chapter 1: Introduction ................................................................................................. 1 Historiography .......................................................................................................... 5 Sources and Methods .............................................................................................. 10 An Overview by Chapter ........................................................................................ 12 Chapter 2: A Teachable Moment: American Reforms to German Education during the Postwar Occupation .................................................................................................... 16 The Basics: Buildings, Books, and Teachers .......................................................... 18 Getting the Teachers: Fragebogen and New Recruits............................................. 23 Applying to Reopen Schools .................................................................................. 27 Keeping the Structure and Grounding the Changes ................................................ 29 A New Subject – Political Science and Civics ....................................................... 32 Rewriting the Textbooks ......................................................................................... 36 Education Service Centers ...................................................................................... 42 New Media: Radio and Film ................................................................................... 44 Overall Impact ........................................................................................................ 46 The Hamburg Agreement, 1964 ............................................................................. 48 Chapter 3: Anti-fascist Education in the Soviet Zone ................................................ 50 The First Few Months in the Classroom ................................................................. 52 Educating and Reeducating the Educators: Purges and Neulehrer ......................... 60 Getting Everyone on the Same Page – Curriculum ................................................ 64 Planning for Life after the Zone.............................................................................. 70 From the DDR to the Wende .................................................................................. 73 Chapter 4: Creating a “German” Past: A History Textbook Analysis, 1988-2014 .... 79 Educational Laws, East and West ........................................................................... 81 Defining East, West, and Reintegrated Germany ................................................... 84 Publishing Textbooks in the Two Germanys .......................................................... 88 East German Textbooks Prior to 1990 .................................................................... 89 West German Textbooks Prior to 1990 .................................................................. 90 Reunification in Terms of Education ...................................................................... 92 The First Decade of a United Germany in Textbooks, 1990-1999 ......................... 94 The Second Era of United Germany in Textbooks, 2000-2014 .............................. 97 Primary Sources in the Texts ................................................................................ 100 Conclusion ............................................................................................................ 103 Chapter 5: Conclusion............................................................................................... 106 Implications for Further Research ........................................................................ 109 Bibliography ............................................................................................................. 111 Primary Sources –Bundesarchiv, Berlin-Litcherfelde .......................................... 111 iv Primary Sources – Georg Eckert Institut für Internationale Schulbuchforschung 111 Primary Sources – National Archives at College Park, MD ................................. 114 Primary Sources - Other........................................................................................ 115 Secondary Sources ................................................................................................ 116 v List of Tables Table 1.1 Post-Reunification Textbooks Used in Analysis …………………... 12 Table 4.1 Examples of East, West, and Combined East-West Headings …...... 86 Table 4.2 German Textbook Thematic Units in the First Era of Reunification, 1990-1999 ……………………………………………………….…. 95 Table 4.3 German Textbook Thematic Units in the Second Era of Reunification, 2000-2014 ……………………………………....….. 99 vi List of Figures Figure 3.1 Educating and Reeducating the Educators: Purges and Neulehrer ………………………………………………………. 60 vii Chapter 1: Introduction This thesis examines changes in German identity by examining education in two different eras. It puts into conversation the transition out of World War II into a divided, post-Hitlerite Germany, with the transition in 1990 from two Germanys into a unified Bundesrepublik. The Americans, Soviets, and Bundesrepublik Germans used their control of the German secondary education system to create a new model of what being “German” meant. In all three cases, be it in two different halves of a Germany divided after the Second World War, or a single, reunified Germany, the dominant political force set the definitions of “Germanness” for a new generation of school-age Germans. In both the postwar and post-reunification periods, the victors replaced the prior German education system to ensure that their version of history would become the prevailing narrative. In the American Occupation Zone from 1945-1949, this meant initiatives to encourage pluralism and liberal democracy; for the Soviet Zone in those same years, Marxist-Leninist pedagogy; and for the Bundesrepublik after reunification, integrating East and West German topics in history textbooks. In practice, this meant that the postwar history learned by successive generations of high schoolers differed depending on the temporal and geographic space they inhabited. This thesis, then, illuminates the process of creating a national identity through education.1 1 James H. Williams, “Nation, State, School, Textbook,” in (Re)Constructing Memory: School Textbooks and the Imagination of the Nation, ed. James H. Williams, (Rotterdam: Sense Publishers, 2014), 1. 1

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control of the German secondary education system to create new definitions of what it meant to be German. The First Decade of a United Germany in Textbooks, 1990-1999 . 94 . school-age Germans. In both the
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