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Phantom Border

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Lange uses the German Green Belt as a map for a multifaceted investigation of borders, migration, identity, and the meaning of home.
  • 12 November 2024
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"Phantom Border" weaves together the social and ecological stories surrounding the border that divided the author’s native Germany during the Cold War. Lange presents personal, micro-and macro-level perspectives on life in the East German borderland, the Peaceful Revolution, and the time since Reunification. During the four decades the Iron Curtain divided Germany and the European continent, over 1,200 rare animal and plant species found refuge in the border strip – today’s Grünes Band or Green Belt. Lange uses the 1,400-kilometer-long German Green Belt as a map for a personal reconnaissance of her home country and as a prism through which to investigate the transformation of the border, along with the societal reverberations of the division and its aftermath. She employs an anthropological and journalistic approach to provide a multifaceted investigation of borders, migration, identity, and the meaning of home. The book argues that, in light of the current biodiversity crisis, the Green Belt can offer clues about the ecological dimension of “home.”
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Price: $34.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Ibidem Press
Imprint: Ibidem Press
Publication Date: 12 November 2024
Trim Size: 8.27 X 5.83 in
ISBN: 9783838219516
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General, NATURE / Ecology
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This book combines adventure, history, and a narrative of how people lived confronted with the post WWII environment in Germany. Lange explores consequences and lessons that continue to the present day. Phantom Border tackles the larger issues, the importance of home, and its offshoot into conservation biology and ethics. With verve and clarity, it serves a rich fare for a wide readership. It is a great read.
Kerstin Lange is an independent writer and journalist based in Vermont. Originally from northern Germany and fluent in German, she holds an M.A. in Anthropology from Binghamton University and an M.S. in Natural History/Ecology from the University of Vermont. She has taught at both of these institutions, led educational tours around the world, and consulted on natural history-based land management. Lange has published in SAPIENS, Northern Woodlands, and Vermont Quarterly magazines and was a commentator on Vermont Public Radio for ten years. Her mission is to make history and ecology personal.