Dublin Core
Titre
Uprooted : How Breslau became Wroclaw during the century of expulsions
Sujet
Breslau, Wroclaw, WrocBaw, déplacement de population, migration, histoire urbaine, culture urbaine, après guerre, postwar, twentieth century, vingtième siècle, Thum Gregor
Description
Abstract from the publisher :
In this pioneering work, Gregor Thum tells the story of how the city's new Polish settlers found themselves in a place that was not only unfamiliar to them but outright repellent given Wroclaw's Prussian-German appearance and the enormous scope of wartime destruction. The immediate consequences were an unstable society, an extremely high crime rate, rapid dilapidation of the building stock, and economic stagnation. This changed only after the city's authorities and a new intellectual elite provided Wroclaw with a Polish founding myth and reshaped the city's appearance to fit the postwar legend that it was an age-old Polish city. Thum also shows how the end of the Cold War and Poland's democratization triggered a public debate about Wroclaw's "amputated memory." Rediscovering the German past, Wroclaw's Poles reinvented their city for the second time since World War II.
Uprooted traces the complex historical process by which Wroclaw's new inhabitants revitalized their city and made it their own.
Gregor Thum is assistant professor of history at the University of Pittsburgh.