Read The Bitter Taste of Victory Online
Authors: Lara Feigel
new attitude towards
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optimistic views of
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outsider rubble literature and film in
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postwar reconstruction/re-education
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postwar trials
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problem of children in
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as rural slum
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signs Declaration of Defeat
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success after reunification of
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suppression of information
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surrender of
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Thomas Mann’s speech on
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Western commitment to keeping troops in
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see also
Occupation of Germany
‘Germany Under Control’ exhibition (1946)
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Germany Year Zero
(film, 1948)
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Globke, Hans
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Goebbels, Joseph
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Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
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Faust
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Gollancz, Ruth
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Gollancz, Victor
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believes denazification farcical
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campaigns against anti-Semitism
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campaigns on behalf of Germany
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challenges Vansittart on his blinkeredness
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distressing visit to Germany
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health of
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initiates the ‘Save Europe Now’ campaign
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political sympathies
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views theory of collective guilt as barbaric
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In Darkest Germany
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‘What Buchenwald Really Means’
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Göring, Hermann
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appoints Gründgens as artistic director of the State Theater
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character and description
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commits suicide
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cross-examined by Jackson
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found guilty and condemned to be hanged
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as household name in Britain and US
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occasionally allowed to wear top hat at meal times
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persuades Hess to share his biscuit
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reaction to revelations in his indictment
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transferred to Nuremberg jail
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watches concentration documentary
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Grass, Günter,
The Tin Drum
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Grover, Allen
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Gründgrens, Gustaf
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Habe, Hans
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Hamburg
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Hamburg Circus
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Handeslblatt
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Hanover
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Harich, Wolfgang
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Harold (sailor lover of Klaus Mann)
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Harris, Sam
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Harrison, Earl G.
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Hays, George P.
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Hebbel Theater (Berlin)
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Heidegger, Martin
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Heidelberg
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Heidelberg University
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Hellman, Lilian
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Hemingway, Ernest
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books distributed around the world
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court-martialled
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determined to visit Germany
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love for Mary Welsh
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meets Orwell in Paris
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in Paris
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recovers from pneumonia
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relationship with Dietrich
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relationship with Gellhorn
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as source of inspiration
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as war correspondent
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A Farewell to Arms
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Herald Tribune
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Hess, Rudolf
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Hesse, Hermann
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Himmler, Heinrich
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‘A Requiem for Those We Love’
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Hiroshima
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Hitchcock, Alfred
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adoration of
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aggression condoned by Allies
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banished evil from the theatre and reserved it for the political sphere
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body found by Russians
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British support for
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chaos and destruction in the Chancellery
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death of
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death-driven megalomania of
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description of suite in the Grand Hotel, Nuremberg
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as destroyer of the Reich
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German support for
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Germans as his first victims
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as head of state, government and armed forces
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insists he represents the will of the people
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Kunstpolitik
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Miller’s photographs taken in his apartment in Munich
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musical taste
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racial specificity of his victims
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refuses to surrender
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resistance to
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visit to Bayreuth
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Mein Kampf
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