What Remains: Everyday Encounters with the Socialist Past in Germany

Author:   Jonathan Bach (Associate Professor, The New School)
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231182713


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   27 August 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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What Remains: Everyday Encounters with the Socialist Past in Germany


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Author:   Jonathan Bach (Associate Professor, The New School)
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231182713


ISBN 10:   0231182716
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   27 August 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

"List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. ""The Taste Remains"" 2. Collecting Communism 3. Unbuilding 4. The Wall After the Wall Epilogue: Exit Ghost Notes Bibliography Index"

Reviews

Jonathan Bach weaves his way elegantly and insightfully through Berlin's postunification landscape, highlighting the absences, unsettlements, and inheritances from the past. In doing so, he shows not only the potency of what remains but also the creativity with which it is addressed and new futures forged. This is a wonderful, highly readable, yet deeply sophisticated book.--Sharon Macdonald, Institut f r Europ ische Ethnologie, Humboldt-Universit t zu Berlin A remarkable in-depth discussion. . . . The conceptual model offered by Jonathan Bach offers a refreshing and incisive way to make sense of the pervasive 'none-sense.'--Andrew Lass American Anthropologist In this wonderful book, Jonathan Bach shows the complexity of East Germans' adjustment to their new reality. Examining preferred consumption items, personal museums of things from the past, demolitions and rebuildings, and memorializations of the Wall, he goes well beyond fashionable invocations of nostalgia to explore unification's assaults on personhood and identity, on senses of place and history. A must read!--Katherine Verdery, the Graduate Center of the City University of New York Jonathan Bach makes an important contribution to the scholarship on the politics of memory in Germany. . . . Eloquently but accessibly written, with expert translations of sometimes very difficult-to-translate German terms. . . . This book illustrates the importance of delving deeply into everyday culture in order to develop a sophisticated understanding of politics.--Jenny W stenberg Perspectives on Politics This highly readable account weaves together public and private, the big and the small, to offer a fresh take on the politics of memory in united Germany. . . . As an insightful, innovative take on this important topic, What Remains is likely to endure.--Kyrill Kunakhovich German Studies Review [What Remains] weaves together theories of representation, time, and memory to examine the complicated legacy of East Germany's material culture. . . . Highly recommended.--Choice What Remains traces a quarter century of present pasts--a minefield of forced dispossessions and reappropriations in the struggles of forging German unification. It offers a vibrant encounter with the residues of Germany's first socialist state and concludes with a moving tribute to a current generation of Nachgeborenen haunted by the failures and the promises of the past.--Andreas Huyssen, Columbia University Jonathan Bach's superb analysis of how state and non-state actors make sense of, display, and appropriate the material remains of the GDR in What Remains: Everyday Encounters with the Socialist Past in Germany could not be more timely. His careful attention to materials that became obsolete almost overnight -- consumer goods, the Berlin Wall, the People's Palace -- has enormous relevance for the pressing questions regarding the schism(s) in German memory.--Benjamin Nienass Public Seminar What Remains is a perceptive and--perhaps more crucially--a very sympathetic account of multiple ways through which ordinary people try to take hold of their politically controversial past. Bach creates an intricate but highly accessible story about the past that is not quite gone.--Serguei Oushakine, Princeton University


Author Information

Jonathan Bach is professor of global studies at the New School. He is author of Between Sovereignty and Integration: German Foreign Policy and National Identity After 1989 (1999) and coeditor of Learning from Shenzhen: China’s Post-Mao Experiment from Special Zone to Model City (2017).

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