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A Cold War In The Soviet Bloc
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A Cold War In The Soviet Bloc

Polish-east German Relations, 1945-1962

A Cold War In The Soviet Bloc

Polish-east German Relations, 1945-1962

BySheldon Anderson
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2000
eBook Published 23 February 2018
Pub. location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429502743
Pages 336 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429971297
SubjectsHumanities
KeywordsOder Neisse Border, East German, East German Diplomat, East German Officials, West German
Get Citation

Get Citation

Anderson, S. (2001). A Cold War In The Soviet Bloc. New York: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429502743
ABOUT THIS BOOK

In A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Sheldon Anderson uses recently declassified documents from Polish and East German communist party and foreign ministry archives to examine the interplay of national interests with the exigencies of communist party relations within the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Anderson explores how Polish-East German relations were strained over the permanence of the Oder-Neisse border, the correct road to socialism, German repatriation from Poland, and trade policy; he provides an inside account of the heated debates that seriously divided the Polish and East German communists.Anderson delves into how and why the rift culminated in the return of the anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka in October 1956, and he delineates how the Polish-East German conflict undermined the unity of the Soviet bloc on its most strategic flank. In doing so, he reveals the persistence of nationalism and ethnic prejudice in the former communist countries. In this timely text, Anderson pinpoints how nationalism has reemerged as a powerful political force following the end of the Cold War. With A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Anderson markedly fills the gap in the existing scholarship on postwar relations between the countries of East Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
"There Are No Good Germans": The Myth of Proletarian Internationalism, 1945–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 2|21 pages
The Controversy over the Oder-Neisse Border, 1946–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 3|24 pages
The Myth of the Stalinist Brotherhood, 1949–1954
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 4|20 pages
The Problems of German Repatriation, Reparations, and Trade, 1945–1953
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
German Remilitarization and the Polish Thaw, 1954–1955
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 6|20 pages
Khrushchev's De-Stalinization Speech and Gomułka's Return to Power, January–October, 1956
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 7|25 pages
The Cold Winter of Polish–East German Relations, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 8|25 pages
Gomułka's Trade Policies and the Recurring Problem of German Repatriation, 1953–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 9|20 pages
Gomułka's Foreign Policy and the Ulbricht-Gomułka Summit, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 10|18 pages
The Rapacki Plan and the German Question, 1957–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
The Right Road to Socialism and Ulbricht's Visit to Poland, 1958–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 12|18 pages
The GDR as a Model for Polish Socialism, 1959–1961
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 13|24 pages
The Berlin Wall and the Détente in Polish–East German Relations, 1961–1962
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter |6 pages
Conclusion
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract

In A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Sheldon Anderson uses recently declassified documents from Polish and East German communist party and foreign ministry archives to examine the interplay of national interests with the exigencies of communist party relations within the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Anderson explores how Polish-East German relations were strained over the permanence of the Oder-Neisse border, the correct road to socialism, German repatriation from Poland, and trade policy; he provides an inside account of the heated debates that seriously divided the Polish and East German communists.Anderson delves into how and why the rift culminated in the return of the anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka in October 1956, and he delineates how the Polish-East German conflict undermined the unity of the Soviet bloc on its most strategic flank. In doing so, he reveals the persistence of nationalism and ethnic prejudice in the former communist countries. In this timely text, Anderson pinpoints how nationalism has reemerged as a powerful political force following the end of the Cold War. With A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Anderson markedly fills the gap in the existing scholarship on postwar relations between the countries of East Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
"There Are No Good Germans": The Myth of Proletarian Internationalism, 1945–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 2|21 pages
The Controversy over the Oder-Neisse Border, 1946–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 3|24 pages
The Myth of the Stalinist Brotherhood, 1949–1954
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 4|20 pages
The Problems of German Repatriation, Reparations, and Trade, 1945–1953
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
German Remilitarization and the Polish Thaw, 1954–1955
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 6|20 pages
Khrushchev's De-Stalinization Speech and Gomułka's Return to Power, January–October, 1956
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 7|25 pages
The Cold Winter of Polish–East German Relations, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 8|25 pages
Gomułka's Trade Policies and the Recurring Problem of German Repatriation, 1953–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 9|20 pages
Gomułka's Foreign Policy and the Ulbricht-Gomułka Summit, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 10|18 pages
The Rapacki Plan and the German Question, 1957–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
The Right Road to Socialism and Ulbricht's Visit to Poland, 1958–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 12|18 pages
The GDR as a Model for Polish Socialism, 1959–1961
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 13|24 pages
The Berlin Wall and the Détente in Polish–East German Relations, 1961–1962
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter |6 pages
Conclusion
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

In A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Sheldon Anderson uses recently declassified documents from Polish and East German communist party and foreign ministry archives to examine the interplay of national interests with the exigencies of communist party relations within the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Anderson explores how Polish-East German relations were strained over the permanence of the Oder-Neisse border, the correct road to socialism, German repatriation from Poland, and trade policy; he provides an inside account of the heated debates that seriously divided the Polish and East German communists.Anderson delves into how and why the rift culminated in the return of the anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka in October 1956, and he delineates how the Polish-East German conflict undermined the unity of the Soviet bloc on its most strategic flank. In doing so, he reveals the persistence of nationalism and ethnic prejudice in the former communist countries. In this timely text, Anderson pinpoints how nationalism has reemerged as a powerful political force following the end of the Cold War. With A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Anderson markedly fills the gap in the existing scholarship on postwar relations between the countries of East Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
"There Are No Good Germans": The Myth of Proletarian Internationalism, 1945–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 2|21 pages
The Controversy over the Oder-Neisse Border, 1946–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 3|24 pages
The Myth of the Stalinist Brotherhood, 1949–1954
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 4|20 pages
The Problems of German Repatriation, Reparations, and Trade, 1945–1953
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
German Remilitarization and the Polish Thaw, 1954–1955
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 6|20 pages
Khrushchev's De-Stalinization Speech and Gomułka's Return to Power, January–October, 1956
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 7|25 pages
The Cold Winter of Polish–East German Relations, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 8|25 pages
Gomułka's Trade Policies and the Recurring Problem of German Repatriation, 1953–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 9|20 pages
Gomułka's Foreign Policy and the Ulbricht-Gomułka Summit, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 10|18 pages
The Rapacki Plan and the German Question, 1957–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
The Right Road to Socialism and Ulbricht's Visit to Poland, 1958–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 12|18 pages
The GDR as a Model for Polish Socialism, 1959–1961
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 13|24 pages
The Berlin Wall and the Détente in Polish–East German Relations, 1961–1962
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter |6 pages
Conclusion
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract

In A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Sheldon Anderson uses recently declassified documents from Polish and East German communist party and foreign ministry archives to examine the interplay of national interests with the exigencies of communist party relations within the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Anderson explores how Polish-East German relations were strained over the permanence of the Oder-Neisse border, the correct road to socialism, German repatriation from Poland, and trade policy; he provides an inside account of the heated debates that seriously divided the Polish and East German communists.Anderson delves into how and why the rift culminated in the return of the anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka in October 1956, and he delineates how the Polish-East German conflict undermined the unity of the Soviet bloc on its most strategic flank. In doing so, he reveals the persistence of nationalism and ethnic prejudice in the former communist countries. In this timely text, Anderson pinpoints how nationalism has reemerged as a powerful political force following the end of the Cold War. With A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Anderson markedly fills the gap in the existing scholarship on postwar relations between the countries of East Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
"There Are No Good Germans": The Myth of Proletarian Internationalism, 1945–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 2|21 pages
The Controversy over the Oder-Neisse Border, 1946–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 3|24 pages
The Myth of the Stalinist Brotherhood, 1949–1954
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 4|20 pages
The Problems of German Repatriation, Reparations, and Trade, 1945–1953
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
German Remilitarization and the Polish Thaw, 1954–1955
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 6|20 pages
Khrushchev's De-Stalinization Speech and Gomułka's Return to Power, January–October, 1956
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 7|25 pages
The Cold Winter of Polish–East German Relations, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 8|25 pages
Gomułka's Trade Policies and the Recurring Problem of German Repatriation, 1953–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 9|20 pages
Gomułka's Foreign Policy and the Ulbricht-Gomułka Summit, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 10|18 pages
The Rapacki Plan and the German Question, 1957–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
The Right Road to Socialism and Ulbricht's Visit to Poland, 1958–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 12|18 pages
The GDR as a Model for Polish Socialism, 1959–1961
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 13|24 pages
The Berlin Wall and the Détente in Polish–East German Relations, 1961–1962
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter |6 pages
Conclusion
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

In A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Sheldon Anderson uses recently declassified documents from Polish and East German communist party and foreign ministry archives to examine the interplay of national interests with the exigencies of communist party relations within the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Anderson explores how Polish-East German relations were strained over the permanence of the Oder-Neisse border, the correct road to socialism, German repatriation from Poland, and trade policy; he provides an inside account of the heated debates that seriously divided the Polish and East German communists.Anderson delves into how and why the rift culminated in the return of the anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka in October 1956, and he delineates how the Polish-East German conflict undermined the unity of the Soviet bloc on its most strategic flank. In doing so, he reveals the persistence of nationalism and ethnic prejudice in the former communist countries. In this timely text, Anderson pinpoints how nationalism has reemerged as a powerful political force following the end of the Cold War. With A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Anderson markedly fills the gap in the existing scholarship on postwar relations between the countries of East Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
"There Are No Good Germans": The Myth of Proletarian Internationalism, 1945–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 2|21 pages
The Controversy over the Oder-Neisse Border, 1946–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 3|24 pages
The Myth of the Stalinist Brotherhood, 1949–1954
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 4|20 pages
The Problems of German Repatriation, Reparations, and Trade, 1945–1953
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
German Remilitarization and the Polish Thaw, 1954–1955
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 6|20 pages
Khrushchev's De-Stalinization Speech and Gomułka's Return to Power, January–October, 1956
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 7|25 pages
The Cold Winter of Polish–East German Relations, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 8|25 pages
Gomułka's Trade Policies and the Recurring Problem of German Repatriation, 1953–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 9|20 pages
Gomułka's Foreign Policy and the Ulbricht-Gomułka Summit, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 10|18 pages
The Rapacki Plan and the German Question, 1957–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
The Right Road to Socialism and Ulbricht's Visit to Poland, 1958–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 12|18 pages
The GDR as a Model for Polish Socialism, 1959–1961
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 13|24 pages
The Berlin Wall and the Détente in Polish–East German Relations, 1961–1962
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter |6 pages
Conclusion
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract

In A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Sheldon Anderson uses recently declassified documents from Polish and East German communist party and foreign ministry archives to examine the interplay of national interests with the exigencies of communist party relations within the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Anderson explores how Polish-East German relations were strained over the permanence of the Oder-Neisse border, the correct road to socialism, German repatriation from Poland, and trade policy; he provides an inside account of the heated debates that seriously divided the Polish and East German communists.Anderson delves into how and why the rift culminated in the return of the anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka in October 1956, and he delineates how the Polish-East German conflict undermined the unity of the Soviet bloc on its most strategic flank. In doing so, he reveals the persistence of nationalism and ethnic prejudice in the former communist countries. In this timely text, Anderson pinpoints how nationalism has reemerged as a powerful political force following the end of the Cold War. With A Cold War in the Soviet Bloc, Anderson markedly fills the gap in the existing scholarship on postwar relations between the countries of East Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
"There Are No Good Germans": The Myth of Proletarian Internationalism, 1945–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 2|21 pages
The Controversy over the Oder-Neisse Border, 1946–1949
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 3|24 pages
The Myth of the Stalinist Brotherhood, 1949–1954
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 4|20 pages
The Problems of German Repatriation, Reparations, and Trade, 1945–1953
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
German Remilitarization and the Polish Thaw, 1954–1955
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 6|20 pages
Khrushchev's De-Stalinization Speech and Gomułka's Return to Power, January–October, 1956
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 7|25 pages
The Cold Winter of Polish–East German Relations, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 8|25 pages
Gomułka's Trade Policies and the Recurring Problem of German Repatriation, 1953–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 9|20 pages
Gomułka's Foreign Policy and the Ulbricht-Gomułka Summit, 1956–1957
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 10|18 pages
The Rapacki Plan and the German Question, 1957–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
The Right Road to Socialism and Ulbricht's Visit to Poland, 1958–1959
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 12|18 pages
The GDR as a Model for Polish Socialism, 1959–1961
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter 13|24 pages
The Berlin Wall and the Détente in Polish–East German Relations, 1961–1962
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
chapter |6 pages
Conclusion
BySheldon Anderson
View abstract
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