Socialist subjectivities: Queering East Germany under Honecker

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Authors
White, Katharine
Harrison, Scott
Hayton, Jeffrey P.
Advisors
Issue Date
2025-05
Type
Book
Keywords
German studies , History , German history , Gender studies , Gay and lesbian studies , LGBTQ
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
White, K., Harrison, S. & Hayton, J. (Eds.). (2025). Socialist subjectivities: Queering East Germany under Honecker. University of Michigan Press.
Abstract

"Socialist Subjectivities works within the logics of queer time to reanimate East German subjectivities in the 1970s and 1980s beyond the narrative of the German Democratic Republic's long march towards demise. While East Germany certainly ended in dissolution, not all East Germans experienced late socialism in a singular manner. Rather, even after a generation of building socialism, East Germans under Honecker continued to pursue a range of socialist presents and a multiplicity of socialist futures up to and beyond 1989. This edited volume utilizes queer temporalities to interrogate how individuals lived non-normative possibilities in a highly normative world.

Whether one was an apparatchik, artist, or alcoholic, the everyday interactions, experiences, and rituals of late socialism proved crucial to establishing the conditions around which subjecthood was constructed. Despite stereotypes of apathy and inertia, East Germans lent a considerable dynamism to their society, and by generating a cacophony of opinions and a heterogeneity of ideas, they constantly transformed state socialism. By foregrounding socialist subjects and the iterative nature of socialism during these decades, this volume paints a richer portrait of East Germany—one that illuminates how East Germans imagined their futures in a society whose collapse they could not foresee." (Provided by publisher)

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Description
Available in paperback, hardcover, ebook (open access).
Publisher
University of Michigan Press
Journal
Book Title
Series
Social History, Popular Culture, and Politics in Germany
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