Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. German-Balkan Entangled Histories in the Twentieth Century | Christopher A. Molnar and Mirna Zakic
Part I. War and Empire in the Balkans
1. “A Colony of the Central Powers”: War, Raw Materials, and the Subjection of Romania | David Hamlin
2. A New Light on Yugoslav-German Trade Relations and Economic Anti-Semitism: The Ethnic German Poultry Product Cooperative in the Vojvodina during the 1930s | Bernd Robionek
3. Racializing the Balkans: The Population of Southeastern Europe in the Mind of German and Austrian Racial Anthropologists, 1914–1945 | Christian Promitzer
4. “My Life for Prince Eugene”: History and Nazi Ideology in Banat German Propaganda in World War II | Mirna Zakic
5. Nazi Germany and the Holocaust in the Independent State of Croatia, 1941–1945 | Mark Biondich
6. German Collective Guilt in the Narratives of Southeastern European Holocaust Survivors | Katerina Kralova and Jiri Kocianpart
Part II. Aftershocks and Memories of War
7. Multiply Entangled: The Gottschee Germans between Slovenia, Austria, Germany, and North America | Jannis Panagiotidis
8. We Had to Leave Our Really Good Dog: American Gottscheers and the Memories of World War II in Slovenia | Gregor Kranjc
9. From Model to Warning: Narratives of Resettlement “Home to the Reich” after World War II | Gaelle Fisher
10. Commemorating the Lost Heimat: Germans as Kulturträger on the Monuments of the Danube Swabians | Jeffrey Luppes
11. Croatian Émigrés, Political Violence, and Coming to Terms with the Past in 1960s West Germany | Christopher A. Molnar
12. Photographic (Re)memory: The Holocaust and Post–World War II Memory in Yugoslavia | Amila Becirbegovic
13. The Politics of Screen Memory in Nicol Ljubić’s Stillness of the Sea | Anna E. Zimmer
Notes
Contributors
Index