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| | Summer Sandhoff: essay about Berdahl, Where the World Ended (1999) |
 | | A letter written to Wessi relatives from an Ossi man in Berdahl’s book talks about him and his child driving through the border, from east to west, and marveling at the many shops and grocery stores in nearby Wessi cities. |
 | | These women’s identities were at first shifted towards Wessi ideals when those concepts seemed fresh and new, and perhaps "better", and then shifted away from Wessi ideals and towards their self-created Ossi ideals. |
 | | They were not entirely based upon either Wessi or Ossi traditions, morals, values, it was more of a combining of the two belief systems. |
| www.history.ucsb.edu /faculty/marcuse/classes/133c/133cproj/SandhoffBerdahl99-043.htm (1874 words) |
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