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Chapter 2 - “Democratic” and “Open to the World”

Reshaping Narratives of Local Identity in Cologne

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2024

Jeremy DeWaal
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
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Summary

This chapter examines popular appeal to local Heimat as a site of political renewal in Cologne. It shows how democratically engaged localists advanced narratives of “Cologne democracy” and “openness to the world,” while replacing nationalist narrative of their region as a “Watch on the Rhine” with that of the Rhineland as a “bridge” to the West. Democratically engaged localists further argued that Heimat should be about promoting European unity and post-nationalist ideas of nation. Such groups constructed these narratives by pulling on useable local histories and reinventing local traditions. Such early democratic identifications, however, existed alongside major failures in democratic practice and frequent depictions of the Eastern bloc as an “anti-Heimat.” Emphasis on democratic local histories also aggravated failures to confront guilt for the Nazi past. Exclusion of newcomers also represented a significant challenge. More inclusively minded Cologners attempted to combat persistent exclusionary practices by arguing for “Cologne tolerance” as a local value and by insisting that a correctly understood Heimat concept should generate sympathy for the displaced.

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Geographies of Renewal
Heimat and Democracy in West Germany, 1945–1990
, pp. 73 - 114
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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