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Transition to Democracy—or Anschluss? The Two Germanies and Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2014

Extract

TO ANALYSE THE GERMAN QUESTION IN THIS TRANSITORY moment is risky in several respects. The German novelist Martin Walser who underwent a metamorphosis from a fellow traveller of the communists to a German nationalist put it bluntly: ‘He who does not get below his intellectual level when talking about Germany has no intellectual level at all.’ The topic has pitfalls everywhere:

— it is deeply connected with emotions, whatever the view of the writer;

— it is in flux, ‘words are already out of date in your mouth’ as a cynic put it. The increasing number of actors who claim to have a say in the German unification process makes prognosis almost impossible;

— scientific analysis of this unique event lacks concepts. Transition to democracy in a highly penetrated system does not follow the established rules of this branch of knowledge.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Government and Opposition Ltd 1990

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References

1 ‘Ende des Kommunismus—und was nun?’, Zeit-Symposium, Die Zeit, 29 December 1989, pp. 1–14, at p. 13.

2 op. cit., p. 1.

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