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East German Perspectives on Transformation after 1989: Experiencing, Remembering, and Responding to Unification [Kõva köide]

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Examines eastern Germans' diversity of experiences of 1989/90 and its continuing effects as reflected in biographical, creative, and collective representations, demonstrating the ongoing impact of die Wende in contemporary Germany.

As the fall of the Berlin Wall and the official unification of Germany recede into the past, their impact on questions of identity and belonging in Germany endures. For many eastern Germans, the process of change and adaptation that began in 1989/90-in German die Wende, the turning point or transition-is not yet over; indeed, recent public discourse and events in Germany have caused controversy by questioning established narratives of unification. Rather than viewing the Wende as a phenomenon of 1989/90 and its immediate aftermath, this volume presents it as a complex and ongoing process.

By examining eastern German representations of, and responses to, the Wende from varying perspectives-including life stories, fictional representations, and collective visions-the contributions in this volume present above all a narrative of diversity: just as "the East" cannot be understood as a homogenous space, neither can the Wende be seen as a unified-or unifying-experience. From an eastern German perspective, the period since 1989 has been marked by continuity as much as rupture, with the promised freedom and democracy often being overshadowed by violence and alienation. By focusing on the longer-term sociocultural implications of transition, this volume provides insights into past and present experiences of the Wende, as well as multiple imaginations of Germany's future.
Acknowledgments
Glossary of Key Terms and Abbreviations

Part I: Shifting Narratives of the Wende
Introduction: Wende ohne Ende? Unfinished Narratives of Transformation
Anna Saunders and Caroline Summers
Chapter 1: Beyond the "Shining Moment": The Revolution of 1989 and the Making
of Contemporary Germany
Christina Morina

Part II: Private Spaces: Life Stories in Transition
Chapter 2: From Inclusion in the Late GDR to Exclusion in the Newly Unified
Germany? Mozambican Labor Migrants and the Transformation of East German
Migration Policy
Tom Drechsel
Chapter 3: Making Sense of Postsocialism and Masculinity: Homepages of East
German Men in the 1990s and 2000s
Lea Frese-Renner
Chapter 4: Translating the Personal into the Literary: The Afterlife of East
German Experience in Post-Unification Texts
Caroline Summers

Part III: Creative Spaces: Cultural Representations of Change
Chapter 5: Staging Violence: The Wende and its Aftermath in Recent Theater
Productions
Carola Hähnel-Mesnard
Chapter 6: Ende ohne Wende? The Transformationsjahre and Disgust in Manja
Präkels's Als ich mit Hitler Schnapskirschen aß and Bahati Glaß's Das
Geschenk meines Vaters
Matthew Hines
Chapter 7: Spaces and Places of Economic Transformation in Hans-Christian
Schmid's Lichter, Thomas Stuber's In den Gängen, and Vanessa Jopp's Vergiss
Amerika
Elizabeth M. Ward

Part IV: Public Spaces: Reclaiming the Wende
Chapter 8: Between GDR and "Mitteldeutschland": Identity and Television in
East Germany in the Early 1990s
Nikolai Okunew
Chapter 9: Re-Narrating Unification -Shifting Generational Perspectives on
1989/90 and its Aftermath
Stephan Ehrig
Chapter 10: The Long Path to Memorialization: Envisioning Leipzig's
Freiheits- und Einheitsdenkmal
Anna Saunders

Notes on Contributors
Index
ANNA SAUNDERS is Professor of German at the University of Liverpool. CAROLINE SUMMERS is Associate Professor in Translation and Transcultural Studies at the University of Warwick. ANNA SAUNDERS is Professor of German at the University of Liverpool. CAROLINE SUMMERS is Associate Professor in Translation and Transcultural Studies at the University of Warwick.