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GIs and Frauleins: The German-American Encounter in 1950s West Germany.


GIs and Frauleins: The German-American Encounter in 1950s West Germany West Germany: see Germany. . By Maria Hohn (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press The University of North Carolina Press (or UNC Press), founded in 1922, is a university press that is part of the University of North Carolina. External link
  • University of North Carolina Press
, 2002. xv plus 337 pp. $22.50).

Maria Hohn provides a fascinating study of the encounter between Germans and the American military in the rural West German state of the Rhineland-Palatinate during the 1950s. The book focuses on developments in the small town of Baumholder and the city of Kaiserslautern, both of which hosted large concentrations of American troops. The local histories have broader significance because during the 1950s an anxious national debate arose concerning the perceived immorality that the American military brought to the towns. Hohn describes how "the seductions of the American way The American way of life is an expression that refers to the "life style" of people living in the United States of America. It is an example of a behavioral modality, developed from the 17th century until today.  of life" (10) imported by the troops provoked a national moral panic Moral panic is a sociological term, coined by Stanley Cohen, meaning a reaction by a group of people based on the false or exaggerated perception that some cultural behavior or group, frequently a minority group or a subculture, is dangerously deviant and poses a menace to society.  over American influence in the new West German state.

Hohn begins by briefly sketching the history of Baumholder as a military base during the Third Reich Third Reich

Official designation for the Nazi Party's regime in Germany from January 1933 to May 1945. The name reflects Adolf Hitler's conception of his expansionist regime—which he predicted would last 1,000 years—as the presumed successor of the Holy Roman
 and through the years of the French occupation after World War II. When in 1951 the United States embarked on a dramatic military build-up in Europe as tensions with the Soviet Union escalated, Baumholder experienced a sudden influx of American troops. The growing American presence brought an economic boom to the small town. Hohn effectively draws on oral histories and archival sources to describe the personal interactions between American GIs and Germans in Baumholder and Kaiserslautern. Despite instances of trouble, Hohn concludes that relations were "mostly cordial" (83). Beyond the economic prosperity that American dollars brought to the local economy, Hohn credits official efforts by the American military to act as good neighbors with winning over the Germans.

The most important American import to the local communities was the "American way of life," (75) a habitus habitus /hab·i·tus/ (hab´i-tus) [L.]
1. attitude (2).

2. physique.


hab·i·tus
n. pl.
 not easily defined, but marked in Hohn's view by particular music, consumer goods consumer goods

Any tangible commodity purchased by households to satisfy their wants and needs. Consumer goods may be durable or nondurable. Durable goods (e.g., autos, furniture, and appliances) have a significant life span, often defined as three years or more, and
, and a casual style. That American style proved appealing especially to the younger generation of Germans. Many Germans, however, regarded with disgust the loosening of morals that American money and manners seemed to bring. Religious conservatives responded with a campaign to forestall the spreading Americanization.

The book recounts an interesting and complex story of how the ensuing debate played out on the national, state, and local levels. At the heart of German concerns were relationships between German women and American GIs, and especially African-American soldiers. To conservative onlookers, the women who embraced not simply American soldiers, but equally the consumer goods they could provide, amounted to no better than prostitutes. Hohn carefully details how jurists The following lists are of prominent jurists, including judges, listed in alphabetical order by jurisdiction. See also list of lawyers. Antiquity
  • Hammurabi
  • Solomon
  • Manu
  • Chanakya
 and social welfare workers focused their attention on women who socialized so·cial·ize  
v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To place under government or group ownership or control.

2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable.
 with, or worked for, Americans. Social workers attempted to counter Americanization both by seeking to protect women from American influences and by invoking increasingly expansive definitions of prostitution to prosecute those women who succumbed to American temptations. Hohn argues that conservative clergy and social welfare workers "were able to use the alleged moral crisis" to advance a "conservative agenda" opposed to both sexual promiscuity Promiscuity
See also Profligacy.

Anatol

constantly flits from one girl to another. [Aust. Drama: Schnitzler Anatol in Benét, 33]

Aphrodite

promiscuous goddess of sensual love. [Gk. Myth.
 and materialistic consumer culture, both of which conservatives identified with America (11).

Hohn offers a rich social history of the German-American encounter. She describes the milieu that emerged around the bases, including the bars that sprang up to cater to American GIs. Race contributed to a combustible com·bus·ti·ble
adj.
Capable of igniting and burning.

n.
A substance that ignites and burns readily.
 mix of anxieties regarding the establishments, as a large number of the bar-owners were Jewish displaced persons, and the bars were segregated on a de facto [Latin, In fact.] In fact, in deed, actually.

This phrase is used to characterize an officer, a government, a past action, or a state of affairs that must be accepted for all practical purposes, but is illegal or illegitimate.
 basis for whites and blacks. Hohn discerns evidence of pervasive, but rarely openly expressed, antisemitism in the German discussion of the bar-owners. Without mentioning Jewish bar-owners specifically, some German commentators condemned bar-owners "'who could barely speak German and whose names [were] unpronounceable'" (211).

Hohn focuses considerable attention on analyzing relations between Germans and African Americans. She persuasively shows that most Germans across the political spectrum found sexual relationships between German women and African Americans to be repugnant REPUGNANT. That which is contrary to something else; a repugnant condition is one contrary to the contract itself; as, if I grant you a house and lot in fee, upon condition that you shall not aliens, the condition is repugnant and void. Bac. Ab. Conditions, L. . Women who associated with African Americans were more likely to be treated as prostitutes than women who associated with white soldiers. Hohn observes that Germans could draw "on the example of American racial segregation" in phrasing their own objections to relationships between German women and African Americans (86). Hohn's ultimate conclusions on the encounter between Germans and black Americans are fairly tentative. She describes her book as "a first effort to explore the complicated manner in which the German encounter with the American military might have Americanized traditional assumptions about race" (234).

The book's argument on this score is intriguing, but it seems doubtful that "Americanization" of German assumptions ultimately will be the most productive way to think about the German-American encounter on the subject of race. The term Americanization suggests a merely receptive role for Germans and imputes to America at once a homogeneity and an other-ness from Germany, none of which seems particularly apt on the subject of thinking about race. As Hohn suggests throughout her excellent study, the German-American encounter produced a transnational dialogue that ultimately influenced both American and German ideas about race.

Timothy Schroer

State University of West Georgia In recent years, the university has been named by the Princeton Review as one of the Best Southeastern Colleges and one of America's Best Value Colleges. Its 109 programs of study include 60 at the bachelor's level, 45 at the master's and specialist's, two at the doctoral level and two  
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Title Annotation:Reviews
Author:Schroer, Timothy
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Mar 22, 2004
Words:836
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