Abstract
National identity and political attitudes in the process of
German-German unification.
Topics: Judgement on the unification contract; personal role in the
German-German unification process; today's assessment of the
expectations of unification; effects of currency, economic and social
union on personal standard of living; national identity;
understanding of native country; ties to state; significance of the
formation of the new states; assessment of the development of the
GDR; those responsible for the break-up of the GDR; things typical of
the GDR; orientation of today's history instruction on FRG and/or GDR
history; reasons for the problems in Eastern Germany (scale); desired
regulations in the constitution; dealing with problems of daily life
such as prices, tax law, competition principle, traffic density,
product selection, mailbox advertising, loss of job, church taxes,
personal financial expenditures, insurance questions and rent law;
trust in the market economy, politicians, common sense, democracy,
the principle of rule by law, solidarity of the citizens, trade
unions, friends, family, one's own person; influx of foreigners;
admission of politically persecuted; orientation on Eastern and
Western Europe; relation of Germany to Sweden, USSR, USA, Poland,
England, Czechoslovakia, France and China; place of residence; state.