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Informationen zum Autor Annette F. Timm is Associate Professor of History at the University of Calgary. Her work has appeared in multiple journals and books, including the Canadian Journal of History and the Journal of the History of Sexuality. She is the co-author, with Joshua A. Sanborn, of Gender, Sex and the Shaping of Modern Europe: A History from the French Revolution to the Present Day. Klappentext How a declining population influenced reproductive and sexual health policy in Germany. Zusammenfassung Tracks how fears of a declining population influenced reproductive and sexual health policy in Germany from the end of World War I into the Cold War. The idea that sexual duty should be central to conceptions of citizenship only died with the changing circumstances of the late Cold War. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: birth rates, ideology, and sexual duties; 1. Venereal disease and the crisis of sexuality in the Weimar Republic; 2. Marriage counseling in the Weimar Republic; 3. Nazi Bevölkerungspolitik, health, and the family; 4. Venereal disease control in the Nazi era; 5. Controlling venereal disease in four-power Berlin; 6. Counseling couples in the post-war rubble; 7. Guarding the health of workers and families in the German Democratic Republic; 8. Sexual duties in Cold-War West Germany; Conclusion: the end of sexual duty and the future of Bevölkerungspolitik.
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How a declining population influenced reproductive and sexual health policy in Germany.
Résumé
Tracks how fears of a declining population influenced reproductive and sexual health policy in Germany from the end of World War I into the Cold War. The idea that sexual duty should be central to conceptions of citizenship only died with the changing circumstances of the late Cold War.
Contenu
Introduction: birth rates, ideology, and sexual duties; 1. Venereal disease and the crisis of sexuality in the Weimar Republic; 2. Marriage counseling in the Weimar Republic; 3. Nazi Bevölkerungspolitik, health, and the family; 4. Venereal disease control in the Nazi era; 5. Controlling venereal disease in four-power Berlin; 6. Counseling couples in the post-war rubble; 7. Guarding the health of workers and families in the German Democratic Republic; 8. Sexual duties in Cold-War West Germany; Conclusion: the end of sexual duty and the future of Bevölkerungspolitik.