THE POLISH-GERMAN BORDERLANDS Recent Titles in Bibliographies and Indexes in World History World Racism and Related Inhumanities: A Country-by-Country Bibliography Meyer Weinberg, compiler A Selected Bibliography of Modern Historiography Attila Pok, editor The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union: A Selected Bibliography of Sources in English Abraham J. Edelheit and Hershel Edelheit, editors History of Canadian Childhood and Youth: A Bibliography Neil Sutherland, Jean Barman, and Linda Hale, compilers Contemporary Canadian Childhood and Youth: A Bibliography Neil Sutherland, Jean Barman, and Linda Hale, compilers Spanish and Portuguese Jewry: A Classified Bibliography Robert Singerman, compiler Crime in Victorian Britain: An Annotated Bibliography from Nineteenth-Century British Magazines EM. Palmegiano, compiler Joseph Chamberlain: A Bibliography Scott Newton and Dilwyn Porter, compilers Agriculture in Britain and America, 1660-1820: An Annotated Bibliography of the Eighteenth-Century Literature Samuel J. Rogal, compiler Annales Historiography and Theory: A Selective and Annotated Bibliography Jean-Pierre V. M. Herubel, compiler THE POLISH-GERMAN BORDERLANDS An Annotated Bibliography COMPILED BY Barbara Dotts Paul Bibliographies and Indexes in World History, Number 35 GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Paul, Barbara Dotts. The Polish-German borderlands : an annotated bibliography / compiled by Barbara Dotts Paul. p. cm.—(Bibliographies and indexes in world history, ISSN 0742-6852 ; no. 35) Includes bibliographical references and indexes. ISBN 0-313-29162-4 (alk. paper) 1. Western and Northern Territories (Poland)—History— Bibliography. 2. Poland—Foreign relations—Germany—Bibliography. 3. Germany—Foreign relations—Poland—Bibliography. I. Title. II. Series. Z2527.W42P38 1994 [DK4600.0335] 016.327438043—dc20 94-13054 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright © 1994 by Barbara Dotts Paul All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 94-13054 ISBN: 0-313-29162-4 ISSN: 0742-6852 First published in 1994 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. Printed in the United States of America <§r The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48-1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 21 CONTENTS Acknowledgments vii Introduction ix Focus of the Bibliography ix Names for the Region x Uneasy Relations xi 1. Primary Sources 1 Guides to Primary Sources 1 Primary Sources for Materials on the Borderlands 2 Bibliographies 6 Fiction Sources 10 Film Sources 12 2. The Borderlands before 1914 12 Early Histories and Travelers' Accounts 15 Historical Studies on the Pre-1914 Period 24 3. World War I Era through 1921 39 The War and the Versailles Peace Conference 39 Upper Silesian Plebiscite 50 4. Interwar Period 55 Danzig, Pomerania, and the Polish Corridor 55 Polish-German Relations and Silesia 68 VI Contents 5. World Warn Period 85 Wartime Publications 85 First Person Accounts 94 Historical Studies 102 6. Postwar Developments 109 Publications to 1970 109+ Post-1970 Publications and Historical Studies 134 7. Fiction 143 8. Films and Other Media 151 Films 151 Other Media 159 Author Index 161 Title Index 175 Subject Index 195 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My interest in the borderlands between Germany and Poland developed with my reading about the Germans who were expelled from there after World War II, and with my learning that many Polish ancestors of the residents of the county where I live, Portage County, Wisconsin, originally came from eastern Pomerania in the late nineteenth century. The Poles immigrated to the United States to seek new opportunities and to escape the germanization that was being forced on them by their Prussian rulers. In compiling the bibliography I have had help from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and my colleagues at the University Library. A se mester's sabbatical leave enabled me to spend full-time gathering materials and a research grant gave me travel funds. I also was able to spend a summer week at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's Summer Research Laboratory on Russia and Eastern Europe, with the help of a housing grant. I particularly want to thank the staffs of libraries around the country for the care and nurturing they've given their respective collections. Many of the items IVe cited are only a few pages long and of specialized interest. Nevertheless, the items wait patiently, in order, on library shelves for a patron to come along. Particular thanks goes to the libraries that I visited, including New York Public Library, Milwaukee Public Library, Madison Public Library, and the libraries of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Kansas, University of Minnesota, University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin- Madison, and University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Thanks also to Jay for typing, indexing, and dog-sitting, Ellen for researching and Taize, Becky for a sympathetic ear and flowers, and Justus for a life-time of support that makes it fun. This page intentionally left blank INTRODUCTION The borderlands between the nations of Germany and Poland have captured the interest of politicians, scholars, and natives for years. In the north they lie between the mouths of two rivers, the Oder and the Vistula. In the south the borderlands lie between two imaginary parallel lines traced to the Czech border. This is the geographic area where Poles and Germans have intermin gled for centuries. Rulers, names, and population percentages have changed, but the people continue to live side by side, sometimes in cooperation and sometimes in animosity. The reunification of Germany, the collapse of Poland's communist government, and the realization that the Soviets would no longer militarily defend the Polish border have renewed interest in the borderlands. Poles worry that Germany's acceptance of the Oder-Neisse boundary will cease. Other countries in Europe watch the diplomatic juggling with concern because the region has already triggered one war this century. FOCUS OF THE BIBLIOGRAPHY The bibliography brings together English language materials that will be useful for students, teachers, and scholars wishing to examine all aspects of the borderlands. It includes travelers' stories, historical and geographic surveys, government reports, polemic literature of all sorts, personal accounts of daily life, regional fiction, and films. It also includes journal articles from scholarly periodicals, while omitting the numerous short articles that have appeared over the years in popular magazines and newspapers.
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