
The GDR Tomorrow
Rethinking the East German Legacy
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 31. January 2024
Book
Hardback
338 pages
978-1-78997-940-4 (ISBN)
Description
A unique experiment at the frontlines of the Cold War, the German Democratic Republic collapsed more than thirty years ago. But it did not simply vanish. Far from being a footnote in history, the state and its legacies continue to inform identities, politics, and culture today. Studies of surveillance and government control, individual agency and equal opportunity, informal networks, strategic alliances, and strategies subverting limitations on freedom of expression prompt us to rethink our conceptualizations of the GDR.
Introducing the work of a new generation of researchers, this collection applies such approaches to a wide range of examples from film, theatre, music, literature, radio, and law. The chapters explore and transgress temporal, national, and disciplinary boundaries. From these investigations emerges a pervasive pattern of informal, border-transcending spheres, subversive identity discourses, and effective agency. Drawing variously on concepts such as Eigen-Sinn, informal society, and alternative public spheres, the papers presented here highlight the relevance of GDR Studies looking forwards. More than a volume about just the past, The GDR Tomorrow holds implications for the future.
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
8 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 24 mm
Weight
664 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78997-940-4 (9781789979404)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2024
1st Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€81.49
Available for download

E-Book
02/2024
1st Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€81.49
Available for download
Persons
Elizabeth Emery is a fourth-year PhD student at the University of Bristol. Her thesis explores articulations of nostalgia within popular music from the former GDR after reunification with a specific focus on the approaches of the bands Silly, Karat, and Rammstein and their reception histories.
Matthew Hines is a Teaching Associate in the German Section at the University of Cambridge. He studied Modern Languages in Oxford, Munich, and Birmingham. He is currently preparing a monograph based on his doctoral research into early GDR literature entitled Writing a New Society: Aufbau in GDR Literature 1949-1962.
Evelyn Preuss teaches at the University of Oklahoma. She is currently finishing her PhD on the politics of East German film aesthetics at Yale University. In addition, she is working on a project examining different globalizing tendencies, their relationship to the local, and their political potential. She has published on film, media aesthetics, architecture, history, and policy.
Content
Contents: Elizabeth Emery, Matthew Hines, and Evelyn Preuss: Introduction: The GDR Tomorrow - The East German Project and its Democratic (Dis)Contents - GDR without Borders: Transnational Perspectives - George Gibson: Briefe ohne Unterschrift: Transnational Identity in the GDR - Yundi Guo: Butterfly over the Wall: Herz's Madam Butterfly (1978) and Its Journey from the Komische Oper to the Welsh National Opera - German Democratic Aesthetics: Co-Authorship and Subversive Audiences - Matthew Hines: A <<Productive>> Alternative to Socialist Realism in Peter Hacks and Heiner Mueller - Anja Thiele: Twofold Testimonies: Jewish Memory of the Holocaust in GDR Fiction - Evelyn Preuss: Hollywood behind the Wall? (Dis)Continuities between Love Story (1970) and Die Legende von Paul und Paula (1973) - <<To Be Continued>>: The GDR's Memory Tomorrow - Beyond 1989: Law and the Instrumentality of the Past - Philipp Ebert: Socialist State Crime, Transitional Justice, and the Question of Individual Responsibility in Germany, 1984-1992 - Alexander D. Brown: Paul Merker: <<Ein Moment kommunistischer Ungleichzeitigkeit>>? - (N)Ostalgie: Future as History - History as Future? - Elizabeth Emery: <<Wenn die Zeit endlos waer, so wie Sand am Meer ... Wuensch ich mir ein Stueck davon jetzt zurueck>>: (N)Ostalgie in East German Popular Music - Anandita Bajpai: Objects of Love: Remembering Radio Berlin International in India - Elizabeth Emery, Matthew Hines, and Evelyn Preuss: Conclusion: GDR Studies Today and Tomorrow.