Abstract
This article features the importance that the winning of the World Cup tournament in 1954 had for West Germany. Nine years after the defeat of the national socialist regime, this victory in soccer's most important event heralded West Germany's entrance into the international community of nations. The positive result in this forum contributed massively to the creation of a new West German collective identity. An essential ingredient of this identity was a positive orientation toward the newly established Federal Republic as a democratic structure, which—in the wake of this victory in soccer—attained growing acceptance and legitimacy among the West German public.
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