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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Katrin Schreiter (Lecturer in German and European Studies, Lecturer in German and European Studies, King's College London)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.90cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 16.00cm Weight: 0.590kg ISBN: 9780190877279ISBN 10: 0190877278 Pages: 306 Publication Date: 05 January 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsSchreiter does an impressive job weaving together the East and West German strands of her multilayered narrative, seamlessly integrating material from various archives, published sources, and oral history interviews. She is at her best when dealing with economic and political history, about which she writes cogently and authoritatively.... Designing One Nation is an impressive and informative book. By offering exciting new perspectives with significant explanatory potential, it makes a valuable original contribution to the literature on Cold War German history. * Katharina Pfützner, American Historical Review * Designing One Nation is an important book that, by using design as a lens, offers a fresh perspective on the German Question. * Katarzyna Jez:&owska, Journal of Contemporary History * Katrin Schreiter offers a multifaceted analysis of the interconnected history of furniture design, production and consumption. She never glosses over differences or tries to smooth them over in favour of a coherent narrative. Instead, she shows how difficult and frustrating the relations could be. It becomes clear that a seemingly unpolitical area such as industrial design was highly politicized and ideologically charged during the Cold War * Sina Fabian, German History * Simply put, this book is outstanding. With this first-rate monograph, Katrin Schreiter has established herself as a leading authority on the interconnectedness of the two Cold War Germanys. * Jason Johnson, Trinity University, New England Journal of History * Katrin Schreiter makes brilliant use of material culture and industrial design to help us understand the Cold War in a new way. Unlike most studies, her work points to the essential connectedness of West and East Germany. Her work is also a powerful argument for the centrality of material culture, consumption, and industrial design to politics and even foreign policy. * Eli Rubin, Western Michigan University * This is a landmark study in the history of postwar German material culture. Schreiter gives us a tangible, even tactile sense of how East and West Germany championed differing aesthetic values while collaborating surreptitiously in the manufacture of household goods. Design history and international relations intersect here in a thoroughly original and carefully researched analysis. * William Glenn Gray, Germany's Cold War * Through its new look at furniture design, this book contributes critically to a growing body of scholarship re-examining the Cold War Germanys as economically and culturally intertwined. Artfully moving between East and West German cases and embedding individual living rooms in the complex nexus of international trade, Schreiter has crafted an integrated history of aesthetic and institutional commonalities across the Iron Curtain. She offers significant insights into how diplomacy and politics of trade between the two Germanys influenced and were shaped by European integration, thereby suggesting Germany's halves converged culturally even before national reunification. * Katherine Pence, Baruch College, City University of New York * This book draws on a rich source base and presents Cold War production and consumption as a complex story of hostility, good will, and practical accommodation. * Jonathan Wiesen, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Journal of Modern History * Through its new look at furniture design, this book contributes critically to a growing body of scholarship re-examining the Cold War Germanys as economically and culturally intertwined. Artfully moving between East and West German cases and embedding individual living rooms in the complex nexus of international trade, Schreiter has crafted an integrated history of aesthetic and institutional commonalities across the Iron Curtain. She offers significant insights into how diplomacy and politics of trade between the two Germanys influenced and were shaped by European integration, thereby suggesting Germany's halves converged culturally even before national reunification. * Katherine Pence, Baruch College, City University of New York * This is a landmark study in the history of postwar German material culture. Schreiter gives us a tangible, even tactile sense of how East and West Germany championed differing aesthetic values while collaborating surreptitiously in the manufacture of household goods. Design history and international relations intersect here in a thoroughly original and carefully researched analysis. * William Glenn Gray, Germany's Cold War * Katrin Schreiter makes brilliant use of material culture and industrial design to help us understand the Cold War in a new way. Unlike most studies, her work points to the essential connectedness of West and East Germany. Her work is also a powerful argument for the centrality of material culture, consumption, and industrial design to politics and even foreign policy. * Eli Rubin, Western Michigan University * Author InformationKatrin Schreiter is Lecturer in German and European Studies at King's College London. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |