After the berlin wall came down in 1989, the government of the soontobeformer german democratic republic pulled off a breathtakingly. In a country where the headquarters of the secret police can become a museum literally overnight, and one in 50 east germans were informing on their countrymen and women, there are a thousand stories just waiting to get out. The fall of the berlin wall by molly smith, illustrated by david opie transport back in time to the fall of the berlin wall. The author steven kelman entered east berlin in 1971 to study social democracy in the german democratic republic. May 14, 2014 learn about the fall of the berlin wall with iminds insightful knowledge series. Art and artifacts from the gdr image 1 beyond the wall. Drug use, prostitution, depression, domestic violence, and suicide all make a jolly appearance. In 1961, the german city of berlin became ground zero in the struggle between the communist and noncommunist worlds when communist east germany began building a wall to divide the city in half. The surprising human factors behind the fall of the berlin. Best of all, if after reading an e book, you buy a paper version of stasiland. Truth can be stranger and more fascinating than fiction. When she got home miriam thought, theres no way theyre going to put me back in that place.
Stasiland by anna funder is a book first published in 2003 about individuals who resisted the east german regime, and others who worked for its secret police, the stasi. Norman gelb, writing before the wall came down, tells how the wall grew from the confusions of the postwar years. Download for offline reading, highlight, bookmark or take notes while you read stasiland. Children follow lucy as one moment she is at the national museum of american history examining pieces of the berlin wall, and the next moment, she travels in time to east berlin during november 1989. The berlin wall was built by the communist government of east berlin in 1961. The spy who came in from the cold by john le carre, zoo station by david downing, the good german by joseph kanon, berlin no. The berlin wall split many families in two, which is part of the reason why escape attempts were so common. Stories from behind the berlin wall ebook written by anna funder. The berlin wall stood as a boundary in the german capital for 28 years, 2 months and 26 days. Ive now read several remarkable books about how and why it collapsed, steeping myself in the dark history before that miraculous. And i liked the order, the directness that i imagined in the people. Read behind the berlin wall east germany and the frontiers of power by patrick major available from rakuten kobo. Lou reed was apparently quite bummed with the finished version of berlin which was slated in the us, but this rock opera about two doomed lovers in the shadow of the berlin wall has become an absolute classic. It reads like a thriller, its deeply researched and smoothly written.
It separated the eastern half from the western half. Today marks the 25th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall. The berlin wall is the first comprehensive account of a divided city and its people in a time when the world seemed to stand permanently on the edge of destruction. The book was published in multiple languages including english, consists of 288 pages and is available in paperback format. Aug 25, 2009 top 10 books about the berlin wall as the 20th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall approaches, here are 10 books that best illustrate the damage it caused. Once the wall went up in 1961 life for east berlin began to improve under the communist system. The novel brings together the story marnhams mission, which is to help build a tunnel from the american sector to the russian sector to tap important phone lines, with his love affair, making it a thrilling tale about lost innocence and loyalties that plays out in prewall berlin. The wall cut off west berlin from surrounding east germany, including east berlin. Reliable information about the coronavirus covid19 is available from the world health organization current situation, international travel. She meets miriam, who tried to escape to west berlin as a sixteenyearold. Top 10 books about the berlin wall books the guardian. East germany and the frontiers of power 9780199605101.
History channel rise and fall of the berlin wall youtube. Does the electronic version of the book completely replace the paper version. Numerous and frequentlyupdated resource results are available from this search. Nov 02, 2014 news world europe fall of the berlin wall. The accidental opening of the berlin wall 1st by mary elise sarotte isbn. Communism and anticommunism in west germany, 19451956 oup, 1997 which won the royal. Erected at a time of growing tension between east and west, the barrier was eventually replaced by a concrete structure topped with wire and studded with watchtowers manned by east german soldiers. Residents of west berlin, right, watch east german construction workers erect a section of the berlin wall in august 1961. It is fascinating, entertaining, hilarious, horrifying and very important. Stories from behind the berlin wall book online at best prices in india on. East germany and the frontiers of power patrick major few historical changes occur literally overnight, but on august 1961 eighteen million east germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the cold war. Anna funders bestselling stasiland brings us extraordinary tales of real lives in the former east germany. How photos depicted life behind the berlin wall, 30 years. The rise of the city and the fall of the wall, by peter.
At first it was barbed wire, but soon it expanded into a 5meterhigh, 165kilometerlong network of concrete walls topped with barbed wire, and guarded with gun emplacements, watchtowers, and mines. The berlin wall, western leaders said, was evidence that east germany was a failing state, that thousands of its people did not want to live under communism. For those who wish to understand the rise of the wall, this book is valuable. Younger readers may not appreciate just how impenetrable the wall seemed. Many people thought it was a symbol of the cold war. The berlin wall was an awkward thing, outlandish and unloved, a barrier planted clear across the middle of the largest city between paris and moscow.
The 100mile berlin wall created an awful, if awesome, scar across the landscape of germanys capital. Then, in the 1980s, i came to live in west berlin for a while and i wondered long and hard what went on behind that wall. In stasiland, winner of the 2004 samuel johnson prize, anna funder tells extraordinary tales from the underbelly of the former east germany, a country where the headquarters of the secret police can become a museum literally overnight, and one in fifty east germans were informing on. Provocatively argues that beatlemania and not kennedy, ordinary letterwriters and not dissident elites, finally undermined the wall through people power. The berlin wall this is a wikipedia book, a collection of wikipedia articles that can be easily saved, imported by an external electronic rendering service, and ordered as a printed book. The first edition of the novel was published in 2003, and was written by anna funder. Communism and anticommunism in west germany, 19451956 oup, 1997 which won the royal historical societys gladstone prize. It symbolised the split between not only west and east berlin, but western and eastern europe as a whole. He also wanted to find out how ordinary people especially young people react to the regimentation of a communist police state. Its hard to believe that it has been 30 years since half a million people gathered in east berlin to demand democracy, with the fall of the berlin wall 28 years later. The berlin wall was a guarded concrete barrier that physically and ideologically divided berlin. After the berlin wall came down in 1989, the government of the soontobe former german democratic republic pulled off a breathtakingly.
Stasiland stories from behind the berlin wall download. It was new years eve 1968, and miriam weber was going over the wall. The dead would often be buried anonymouslyas was the. As a consequences of the second world war, germany got divided into two parts. For instance, potsdamer platz, as it appears today reveals little of the bleak, stark character it had before its reconstruction 19932002.
Sure, the wall might be metaphorical, separating these two like groupsyooks and zooksfrom a friendly relationship, but it almost certainly reads as a symbol for the berlin wall. Construction of the wall was commenced by the german democratic republic gdr, east germany on august 1961. Berlin wall at first constructed of barbed wire, the wall was built to halt large numbers of defections and to prevent east berliners from commuting to the west. On the 25th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall, it is hard to imagine that the german democratic republic ever existed. The untold story behind the fall of the berlin wall. As the 20th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall approaches, here are 10 books that best illustrate the damage it caused.
On june 12, 1987, ronald reagan stood in front of the berlin wall, the brandenburg gate rising behind him, to deliver a speech i had drafted. Anna funder tells extraordinary tales from the underbelly of. Berliner mauer separated the city of berlin in germany from 1961 to 1989. East germany west germany west germany was controlled by usa, france and britain while east germany by russia.
Few historical changes occur literally overnight, but on august 1961 18 million east germans awoke to find themselves walled in by an edifice which was to become synonymous with the cold war. Here are five utterly captivating books that will open your eyes to life behind the berlin wall. Behind the berlin wall ebook by patrick major rakuten kobo. In thetradition of frederick taylors the berlin wall andphilip gourevitchs wewish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families, funders stasiland isa masterpiece of investigative reporting, written with novelistic vividness andthe compelling intensity of a universal, reallife story.
On the morning of august, 1961, the residents of east berlin found themselves cut off from family, friends and jobs in the west by a tangle of barbed wire that ruthlessly cut a. The existence of west berlin, a conspicuously capitalist city deep within communist east germany, stuck like a bone in the soviet throat, as soviet. Patrick major studied as an undergraduate and postgraduate at the university of oxford. Nov 05, 2014 in december 1963, the atlantic monthly published a 43page supplement on berlin, the broken city.
With skill and discernment, frederick taylor recreates the horror of the wall and what it symbolized for east and west. S ophie hardachs thoughtprovoking third novel is one of four books. Read the book on paper it is quite a powerful experience. Oct 31, 2014 three books on the people who have shaped and reshaped the city. It incorporates primary sources, including videos and pictures, to help you understand this significant topic in world history. Behind the berlin wall is the day by day account of life in east germany. True stories from behind the berlin wall struck me like no other in the last five years. I liked the sweeping range of words from heartfelt to heartsick. In the west, its presence was exploited as propaganda. At offshoot of greenhavens acclaimed at issue series focusing on current social issues, this series provides primary and secondary sources to explore and investigate the various opinions offered on each topic.
The fall of the berlin wall twenty years ago today on nov. He came to know east berlin during a year living in west berlin in 198586, and was one of the first western researchers allowed into the east german communist partys archives after the fall of the wall in february 1990, for a phd on the death of the kpd. Apr 17, 2017 too often, americans use the berlin wall in the debate over expanding the wall on our border with mexico. The east germans, allied with the soviet union, built the wall during the cold war. May 27, 2008 the berlin wall 1961 1989 begins with a brief history of berlin, the origins of how the city came to be and the characters who ruled it before moving on to the purpose of the book the berlin wall from its inception, construction, operation and sudden fall on 9 november 1989. General secretary gorbachev, the president said, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the soviet union and eastern europe, if you seek liberalization, come here to this gate.
Stories from behind the berlin wall by anna funder isbn. The berlin wall was taken down on november 9, 1989. Each volume in the at issue in history series is an anthology that focuses on a controversial historical topic. Covers the entire history of the gdr and beyond, from 1945 to the present day. It was the most dramatic example of the political architecture of modern times. Oclcs webjunction has pulled together information and resources to assist library staff as they consider how to handle coronavirus. Few historical changes occur literally overnight, but on august 1961 eighteen million east germans awoke to find them. Nielsen, edge of eternity by ken follett, cloud and wallfish by anne nesbet, black dogs by i. Brookings experts reading list on the fall of the berlin wall and the. Stories from behind the berlin wall from the worlds largest community of readers. In thetradition of frederick taylors the berlin wall andphilip gourevitchs wewish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families, funders stasiland isa masterpiece of investigative reporting, written with novelistic vividness andthe compelling intensity of a.
Many east germans believed that communism was fairer than capitalist west german. Not only does this usage cheapen the history of the berlin wall, it is a terrible analogy. The report was published just two years after construction began on the berlin wall, and many of. This compelling account of the berlin wall s demise and the subsequent fall of the eastern bloc launches a new line of new york times books, and is written by the chief correspondent who covered. Jfk, the cold war and the berlin wall in his new book, journalist greg mitchell has excavated a story of daring escapes and media manipulation which speaks directly to the era. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.
If you were behind the wall, you stayed behind the wall. The wall jumper by peter schneider peter schneiders the wall jumper was written in 1982, a full seven years before the wall came down. Welcome,you are looking at books for reading, the stasiland stories from behind the berlin wall, you will able to read or download in pdf or epub books and notice some of author may have lock the live reading for some of country. This is easily the best book on the fall of the berlin wall. On the day before the wall fell, it was hard to imagine it could ever end. Magnum photographer thomas hoepker discusses 40 years spent chronicling life in strange, sad, vicious and sometimes hilarious east berlin. The berlin wall became a stark and foreboding symbol of the cold war. It tells the story of what it was like to work for the stasi, and describes how those who did so now come to terms, or do not, with their pasts. Therefore it need a free signup process to obtain the book. Berlin wall, 196189, a barrier first erected in aug. With the anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall just around the corner, theres no better time to do a bit of reflecting about what this divisive structure meant for the city and the people who lived there. The accidental opening of the berlin wall, new york. Three books on berlin, from the fall of the wall to today. Theres a serious, edifying experience to be had in reading frederick taylors comprehensive history of the berlin wall.
This lively and thoughtprovoking book is a must for experiencing divided berlin not just with politicos such as willy brandt. The main characters of this non fiction, history story are. Remembering the fall of the berlin wall financial times. In many ways it was the perfect symbol of the iron curtain that separated the democratic western countries and the communist countries of eastern europe. Brookings experts contributed to this select reading list of books and. Exposing life behind the berlin wall the new york times. It was built in order to prevent people from fleeing east berlin. At an art installation by yadegar asisi to mark the 25th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall, visitors tell stories about life behind the wall. What was the berlin wall nico medina, who hq, stephen. The accidental opening of the berlin wall, by mary elise sarotte, basic books, rrp. Strict border regulations meant that if your family member died trying to escape across the wall, you werent even allowed to attend their funeral. Hear the stories of the last people who made it across from the east in the summer of 1989, few suspected that east germany was weeks away from collapse. Life behind the wall east berlin simple book production. The accidental opening of the berlin wall amazon uk.
The starting point for me is frederick taylors the berlin wall because of its masterful detailing of events leading to the walls construction and demolition. Behind the berlin wall east germany and the frontiers of power patrick major. Nico medina is the author of several who hq books, including what was stonewall. People had excellent healthcare facilities and free public transport. To cross this wall you have to go to the citys central and northern districts to kreuzberg, neukolln and wedding and you will find. The berlin wall today not only offers a pictorial tour of the last remaining segments of the wall, it also discusses the past and present of those locations. Simple book production the rise and fall of the berlin wall. People climb the berlin wall at the brandenburg gate after the opening. Willy brandt, then the mayor of west berlin, feared the wall would turn his city into a concentration camp. In a country where the headquarters of the secret police can become a museum literally overnight and in which one in fifty east germans were informing on their fellow citizens, there are thousands of captivating stories. Anna funder s bestselling stasiland brings us extraordinary tales of real lives in the former east germany.
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