Belonging to the nation : inclusion and exclusion in the Polish-German borderlands 1939-1951 / John J. Kulczycki
"In 1939 Nazi Germany incorporated western Poland into the Reich and recognized Germans with Polish citizenship as Volksdeutsche. Following Germany's defeat in 1945, communist-dominated Poland incorporated eastern Germany, recognized German citizens of Polish origin as members of the Polis...
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| Main Authors: | Kulczycki, John J. (Author) |
|---|---|
| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
| Published: | Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : Harvard University Press, 2016 |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Rezension Inhaltsbeschreibung |
| Table of Contents |
|---|
| The disputed Polish-German borderlandsThe German occupation of Poland |
| The creation of a new Poland |
| The recovered lands and their inhabitants |
| The prelude to polonizing identities |
| The initial Polish government nationality measures |
| After the Potsdam Conference |
| The central government and nationality verification |
| The rehabilitation of Volksdeutsche in 1946 |
| A year of crucial changes |
| Nationality policies following the end of mass expulsion |
| The status of autochthons at the end of 1949 |
| The last phase of nationality verification and rehabilitation. |
| The disputed Polish-German borderlands |
| The German occupation of Poland |
| The creation of a new Poland |
| The recovered lands and their inhabitants |
| The prelude to polonizing identities |
| The initial Polish government nationality measures |
| After the Potsdam Conference |
| The central government and nationality verification |
| The rehabilitation of Volksdeutsche in 1946 |
| A year of crucial changes |
| Nationality policies following the end of mass expulsion |
| The status of autochthons at the end of 1949 |
| The last phase of nationality verification and rehabilitation |