This article investigates the reconstruction of the Frankfurt Paulskirche as a symbol of German democratic identity after World War II. The place memory of the Paulskirche is deeply rooted in the 1848 Parliament which anticipated the formation of a German democratic state. The church provided postwar Germans with a physical anchor for their sense of history and feelings of Heimat. This place identity pervades post-1945 debates about the reconstruction of the church and the appropriate uses of that space in the context of Frankfurt’s devastated urban and political landscape. Despite this, the place identity of the Paulskirche remains understudied in the historiography. Rental agreements and correspondence reveal dynamic exchanges between cit...
Rothenburg ob der Tauber is one of Germany\u27s most popular tourist destinations attracting over tw...
The article sets out to describe the main ways with which architecture and urban planning were used ...
This article examines the contending redefinitions of national identity in contemporary Germany's me...
This article investigates the reconstruction of the Frankfurt Paulskirche as a symbol of German demo...
The purpose of this article is to investigate how memory activists from 2008 onwards used the past i...
The purpose of this article is to investigate how memory activists from 2008 onwards used the past i...
The purpose of this article is to investigate how memory activists from 2008 onwards used the past i...
ABSTRACT: The link between place and identity is not stagnant or fixed. It changes over time, influe...
The residents of Wrocław remembering the city’s Prussian-German material heritageThe pr...
AbstractAt the time of German unification, politicians, historians and academics expressed concerns ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The article highlights major issues and problems regarding our understanding of the architecture of ...
Despite its National Socialist origins, the post-war use of Berlin’s Tempelhof Airport has seen it r...
Review of Berlin, Alexanderplatz: Transforming Place in a Unified Germany by Gisa Weszkalnys
This paper examines the appropriation of space for cultural production in Berlin’s central district ...
Rothenburg ob der Tauber is one of Germany\u27s most popular tourist destinations attracting over tw...
The article sets out to describe the main ways with which architecture and urban planning were used ...
This article examines the contending redefinitions of national identity in contemporary Germany's me...
This article investigates the reconstruction of the Frankfurt Paulskirche as a symbol of German demo...
The purpose of this article is to investigate how memory activists from 2008 onwards used the past i...
The purpose of this article is to investigate how memory activists from 2008 onwards used the past i...
The purpose of this article is to investigate how memory activists from 2008 onwards used the past i...
ABSTRACT: The link between place and identity is not stagnant or fixed. It changes over time, influe...
The residents of Wrocław remembering the city’s Prussian-German material heritageThe pr...
AbstractAt the time of German unification, politicians, historians and academics expressed concerns ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The article highlights major issues and problems regarding our understanding of the architecture of ...
Despite its National Socialist origins, the post-war use of Berlin’s Tempelhof Airport has seen it r...
Review of Berlin, Alexanderplatz: Transforming Place in a Unified Germany by Gisa Weszkalnys
This paper examines the appropriation of space for cultural production in Berlin’s central district ...
Rothenburg ob der Tauber is one of Germany\u27s most popular tourist destinations attracting over tw...
The article sets out to describe the main ways with which architecture and urban planning were used ...
This article examines the contending redefinitions of national identity in contemporary Germany's me...