The Student Riots in Germany and their Aftermath
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
This article deals with the peculiarities of the student protests of 1968 in Germany and their
political and social consequences. Among the many protests in the West that year, they had
particularly far-reaching consequences for German society. These consequences were related
to the heavy legacy of the Nazis, who committed grave crimes against humanity during World
War II. It is for this reason that the article places a special emphasis on overcoming the Nazi
past, which played an extremely important role in the emergence and spread of youth protests
in the FRG. Placing the German protests in the context of a generally rather homogeneous and
synchronous protest movement in all Western countries against the old values of bourgeois
society and its morals poses difficulty — it is no accident that one of the symbols of youth
protest was John Lennon’s single “Yesterday”. The past (“yesterday”) indeed came suddenly
into the spotlight and was subjected to unrelenting criticism. But the changes in the political
culture of society and its mentality were very significant. The mutation toward the triumph of
leftist-liberal discourse in the West German public consciousness was so complete and total
that it is possible to state, as German satirists joke, that the situation was similar to the way
public opinion was controlled in the GDR. As a result, it can be rightly asserted that 1968 in
the FRG was perhaps the most important reason for the triumph of left-liberal political discourse
in Germany.
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Citation
Baryshnikov V. N., Borisenko V. N., Plenkov O. Yu. The Student Riots in Germany and their Aftermath. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2022, vol. 67, issue 4, рp. 1212–1230. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu02.2022.411