Dear Colleague, We are pleased to announce the publication of the latest issue of German Studies Review with The Johns Hopkins University Press. German Studies Review Journal of the German Studies Association (GSA) German Studies Review publishes articles and book reviews on the history, literature, culture, and politics of the German-speaking areas of Europe encompassing primarily, but not exclusively, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Read by historians, literary scholars, film scholars, musicologists, art historians, and political scientists from around the world, the journal is distinguished by its interdisciplinary orientation and particularly interested in cultural studies approaches. German Studies Review is a journal of first publication, and all submissions are subjected to double-blind peer review. Our review process is both rigorous and efficient, with a ca. 30% acceptance rate, reviews returned within three months, and time from submission to publication normally less than one year. For submission guidelines, subscription information, and more, please visit http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/german_studies_review/guidelines.html TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume 37, Issue 1 (February 2014) ARTICLES Florian Krobb. "'Welch' unbebautes und riesengroßes Feld': Turkey as Colonial Space in German World War I Writings" / 1-18 Emre Sencer. "Fear and Loathing in Berlin: German Military Culture at the Turn of the 1930s" / 19-40 Philip W. Bennett and Andreas Peglau. "The Nazi Denaturalization of German Emigrants: The Case of Wilhelm Reich" / 41-60 Mila Ganeva. "Fashion Amidst the Ruins: Revisiting the Early Rubble Films And the Heavens Above (1947) and The Murderers are Among Us (1946)" / 61-86 Yuliya Komska. "Theater at the Iron Curtain" / 87-108 John Griffith Urang. "Zur Sache, Schätzchen: Visual Pleasure and New German Cinema" / 109-130 Katharina Gerstenberger. "Störfälle: Literary Accounts from Chernobyl to Fukushima" / 131-148 REVIEW ESSAY Robert Jan Van Pelt. "Nazi Ghettos and Concentration Camps: The Benefits and Pitfalls of an Encyclopedic Approach" / 149-160 BOOK REVIEWS / 161-248 Full issue available online at Project MUSE: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/german_studies_review/ ---------- Accessing German Studies Review via Project MUSE For GSA Members: Your membership in the German Studies Association comes with a subscription to the German Studies Review accessible online via Project MUSE. To access the journal, log in to your member account at https://www.thegsa.org/members/login, then navigate to the Publications section of the Web site and click on German Studies Review. From there, click on GSR Online at the bottom of the bulleted list, and you will be automatically redirected to GSR on Project MUSE. For Non-Members: ON-CAMPUS access to Project MUSE is primarily by IP (Internet Protocol) address. A library or institution subscribing to MUSE provides the institution's range(s) of IP addresses (http://muse.jhu.edu/about/order/domains.html) with the subscription order. MUSE also permits access by referring URL. OFF-CAMPUS access is validated through subscribing institutions. A user must be affiliated with a subscribing institution in order to access full-text articles in MUSE from off-campus. Users might login to MUSE through their library or institution's website or through a 'proxy' server. Another way for the user to authenticate is to use his/her institutional login prior to accessing the full text articles in MUSE. MUSE supports authentication through the single sign-on method provided by Shibboleth (http://shibboleth.internet2.edu/). TO LOGIN, a user selects his/her institution from the list of institutions registered to access MUSE through Shibboleth. If their institution is not listed, they should refer to their librarian for assistance. Shibboleth is available only for institutional collection subscribers, and it can be used by institutional subscribers to access their MUSE collection as well as single titles they subscribe to on the MUSE platform. Shibboleth is not available to institutions that subscribe only to single titles. A subscribing library can request access by referring URL or Shibboleth when placing a subscription order or by sending a request to MUSE Customer Support ([log in to unmask]). Shibboleth access is available only by IP authentication. More information about online journal access via Project MUSE at http://muse.jhu.edu/about/faq.html#access