Cover
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction. Heavy Baggage: Memory and Generation in Ethnic History
Chapter 1. A Flying Piano and Then—Silence: German-Canadian Memories of the Great War
Chapter 2. One Führer, Two Kings: A Canadian Prime Minister in Nazi Germany and the Dilemma of Responsibility
Chapter 3. A Transnational Yekkish Identity? Comparing German Jews in Canada and Israel
Chapter 4. The Roots of Ehnic Fundamentalism in German-Canadian Studies: The Case of Gottlieb Leibbrantdt
Chapter 5. Gatekeeping in the Lutheran Church: Ethnicity, Generation, and Religion in 1960s Toronto
Chapter 6. Migration Trajectories and the Construction of Generational Discourses among Contemporary German Immigrants in Ottawa in the 2000s
Chapter 7. “We Never Really Talked About It”: Second- and Third-Generation German Canadians’ Family Memories of the Holocaust
Chapter 8. Creating Family Legacies: Descendants Memorialize Their German Female Ancestors:
Afterword. What Does It Mean to be “German Canadian”? The Challenge of History and the Obligation of Memory
Bibliography
Contributors
Index