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Synopsis:
Berlin
Biography of a City Non-Fiction
Barney White-Spunner
By:
Narrated by:
Jamie Parker, Barney White-Spunner - introduction
Length:
18 hrs and 9 mins
Release date:
29.10.20
Accent:
RP
Recorded at:
Home Studio, for Heavy Entertainment
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster Audio
Berlin is Europe’s most fascinating and exciting city. It is and always has been a city on the edge – geographically, culturally, politically and morally. The great movements that have shaken Europe, from the Reformation to Marxism have their origins in Berlin’s streets. The long-time capital of Prussia and of the Hohenzollern dynasty it has never, paradoxically, been a Prussian city. Instead it has always been a city of immigrants, a city that accepts everyone and turns them into Berliners. A typical Berliner, it is said, is someone who has just arrived at the railway station.
With its unique dialect, exceptional museums, experimental cultural scene, its liberated social life and its open and honest approach to its history, with monuments to the Holocaust as prominent as its rebuilt royal palace, it is as challenging a city as it is absorbing. And it has always been like that, since its medieval foundation as twin fishing villages. Too often Berlin is seen through the prism of Nazism and its role on the front line in the Cold War. Important, frightening and interesting as those periods are, its history starts much further ago than that.
As approachable for the casual visitor to Berlin as it is informative for those who enjoy reading history, Berlin: The Story of a City is as fascinating as its subject. ©2020 Barney White-Spunner (P)2020 Simon & Schuster Audio
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