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We Are The State We Seek: Everyday Life in Czechoslovakia and East Germany, 1945–89

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2012

ANNEMARIE SAMMARTINO*
Affiliation:
Oberlin College, 197 W. Lorain St., Oberlin, OH 44074; [email protected]

Extract

The study of everyday life has had a particular resonance for historians of state socialism for a variety of reasons. First, the study of everyday life promises to get beyond the notorious doublespeak and rosy scenarios of official discourse. Second, the history of everyday life makes use of the great boon of recent history: the availability of interview subjects. Historians of earlier periods can only look longingly at the surfeit of interview subjects available to those who work on more recent decades. While oral history can have its own problems, the works under consideration in this review largely use them to good effect to get at the lacunae and misrepresentations in official discourse. Third, the study of everyday life offers an important vantage point for understanding the vast majority of citizens who were not resistors and yet challenged the state in important ways. As Sandrine Kott has noted, ‘individual preference . . . constituted a third brake on the “perfect” working of the system’. Finally, the ‘interesting’ events in East European socialism are ones that are people powered, most famously the 1989 revolutions that spanned the region. The history of everyday life offers the promise of explaining the paradox of how supposedly stable regimes which experienced comparatively little open resistance in forty years of existence collapsed in a matter of weeks or even days.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

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References

1 A few examples: Fitzpatrick, Sheila, Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times, Soviet Russia in the 1930s (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999)Google Scholar; Hellbeck, Jochen, Revolution On My Mind: Writing A Diary Under Stalin (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kotkin, Stephen, Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995)Google Scholar. In Poland: Lebow, Katherine, ‘Public Works, Private Lives: Youth Brigades in Nowa Huta in the 1950s’, Contemporary European History, 10, 2 (2001), 199219CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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13 PID (politisch-ideologische-Diversion—or political-ideological Diversion) /PUT (politische Untergrundtätigkeit—or political underground action). Defined in Glaeser, 466.

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