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(2003) Germans or foreigners?, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Ausländer in the Heimat

ethnocentrism in contemporary Germany

Richard Alba, Peter Schmidt, Martina Wasmer

pp. 1-17

"Ausländer" and "Ausländerin" (fern.), literally "out-lander" but meaning "foreigner," are words suggesting that a social chasm separates immigrants from native Germans, and they appear to sustain the dominant image of Germany in the English-language literature as the "ethnic nation" par excellence (Brubaker, 1992). During the early 1990s, the image was solidified by a rash of attacks on immigrants, many of them occurring in the so-called neue Bundesländer, the states of the east, freshly reunified with those of the west (see Koopmans, 1996; Lüdemann and Ohlemacher, 2002, 67–95). Previously unremarkable places like Hoyerswerda, Rostock, and Solingen attained notoriety far beyond Germany. Pictures of skinhead neo-Nazis parading through the streets evoked chilling memories of the 1930s.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230608825_1

Full citation:

Alba, R. , Schmidt, P. , Wasmer, M. (2003)., Ausländer in the Heimat: ethnocentrism in contemporary Germany, in R. Alba, P. Schmidt & M. Wasmer (eds.), Germans or foreigners?, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1-17.

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