Abstract
AbstractFrom its very conception some thirty years ago, Berlin's Humboldt Forum has been one of contemporary Germany's most controversial cultural initiatives. One aspect of this controversy has been the role of the Prussian past in reunified Germany. Housed in a reconstruction of the Prussian Royal Palace destroyed by the East German communist government in 1950, the visual symbolism of the project spurred a long struggle over the appropriate urban aesthetic for the country's capital city. In the view of many critics, the structure symbolizes the triumph of a particular conservative narrative of national memory that excludes the GDR, downplays National Socialism, and uncritically celebrates the Prussian past. This article traces how public debates about the structure of the Humboldt Forum have served as a vehicle for reflection on Prussian history and its relevance (or irrelevance) for reunified Germany.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference15 articles.
1. Palast der Republik oder preussisches Stadtschloss? Wie soll man mit Berlins Mitte umgehen? Die Diskussion um den Wiederaufbau des Hohenzollernschlosses;Trimborn;Die alte Stadt,1998
2. Constructing the Prussia-Myth in East Germany, 1945–61
3. Brand of Brothers?
4. Berlin's Colonial Legacies and New Minority Histories: The Case of the Humboldt Forum and Colonial Street Names in the German Capital;Steckenbiller;Monatshefte,2019
5. Katalysator wider Willen. Das Humboldt Forum in Berlin und die deutsche Kolonialvergangenheit;Morat;Zeithistorische Forschungen/Studies in Contemporary History,2019