TY - BOOK AU - Attanucci,Timothy AU - Horakova,Anna AU - Ivanov,Sanja AU - Korte,Christine AU - Leech,Amy AU - Mallet,Michel AU - Mayr,Maria AU - Mueller,Gabriele AU - Mühl,Sebastian AU - Rebien,Kristin TI - Postsocialist Memory in Contemporary German Culture T2 - Media and Cultural Memory , SN - 9783110737738 U1 - 306.094 PY - 2024///] CY - Berlin, Boston PB - De Gruyter KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / General KW - bisacsh KW - German and European Studies KW - Post-socialist memory KW - futurity KW - post-socialist nostalgia N1 - Frontmatter --; Acknowledgments --; Contents --; Introduction: Socialism’s Pasts and Futurities --; Foreword: Marica Bodrožić’s Poetic Reason in a Time of Cast-Iron Ideas --; Part I: Memories of Unrealized Futures in the Extended Wende Period --; Ruins of the GDR: Multimedial Aesthetics and Visions of Collapse in Jörg Foth’s Letztes aus der DaDaeR (1990) --; “What Might Have Been”: The GDR as Speculative Utopia at the Post-Wende Volksbühne --; Return from the Future: Ingo Schulze’s Open-Ended Wende Narratives --; Part II: Memories of Unrealized Futures in the New Millennium --; Post-Socialist Historiographies: Visual Art in Eastern Germany 30 Years after the GDR --; From Hollywood to Hoyerswerda: Reclaiming East German (Film) History in Andreas Dresen’s Gundermann --; Postsocialist Melancholy: The Highs and Lows of Terézia Mora’s Darius-Kopp Trilogy --; Part III: The Europeanization of Memories of the Future --; A Continent at Dusk or Dawn? The Multi-Author play Ein europäisches Abendmahl as Transcultural Reflection on European Identity --; Recollecting Fragments, Rethinking the Future: Saša Stanišić’s Assemblages of a Transnational Europe --; Challenging Collective Memory and Identities after Sarajevo: The Imaginative Resource of Individual Memory in Marica Bodrožić’s Work --; About the Authors --; Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - Scholarship on Eastern Europe after 1989 often focuses narrowly on the socialist past as authoritarian, dictatorial, or totalitarian. This collection, by contrast, illuminates an additional dimension of post-socialist memory: it traces the survival of hopes and dreams born under socialism and the legacy of the unrealized alternative futures embedded within the socialist past. Looking at contemporary German-language literature, film, theater, and art, the volume analyzes reflections on everyday socialist realities as well as narratives of opposition and dissent. The texts discussed here not only revisit the past, but also challenge the present and help us imagine alternative futures. Rather than framing the unrealized futures envisioned in the pre-1989 era as failures, this collection probes post-socialist memory for its future-oriented potential to rethink issues of community, equity and equality, and late-stage capitalism. Foregrounding the complexities of Eastern European legacies also helps us reimagine the relationship between East and West both in Germany and in Europe as a whole UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110730876 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110730876 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110730876/original ER -