

Author: Wilhelm Cornelia
Publisher: Berghahn Journals
ISSN: 1558-5441
Source: German Politics & Society, Vol.31, Iss.2, 2013-06, pp. : 13-29
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Abstract
This article explores the changing perception of “diversity and “cultural difference in Germany and shows how they were central in the construction of “self and “other throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries affecting minorities such as Jews, Poles, and others. It examines different levels of legal and political action toward minorities and immigrants in this process and explores how the perception and legal framework for the Turkish minority in the past sixty years was influenced by historical patterns of such perceptions and their memory. The article tries to shed some light on how the nature of coming-to-terms with the past ( Vergangenheitsbewältigung ) and the memory of the Holocaust have long prohibited a broader discussion on inclusion and exclusion in German society. It makes some suggestions as to what forced Germans in the postunification era to reconsider legislation, as well as society's approach to “self and “other under the auspices of the closing of the “postwar period and a newly emerging united Europe.
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