Remembering East Germany's Peaceful Revolution
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http://data.uel.ac.uk/id/eprint/219
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Exhibitions and Symposium based on Professor Molly Andrews' longitutional research project (1992-2012) "The Unbuilding of East Germany: Excavating Biography and History", in which interviews were conducted with forty East Germans, most of whom had been leading critics of the East German government and had played an important role in contributing to the bloodless revolution of 1989. Twenty years later, a follow-up study was conducted with fifteen of the original forty participants. The focus of this project has been to explore the meaning of living through these times of momentous change, in conversations carried out over two decades. Two exhibitions were organized, timed to coincide with the 25th anniversary of the opening of the Berlin Wall: the first was in London, at the German Historical Institute (31 October 2014 – 31 January 2015), and the second in Berlin at the Wissenschaftzentrum (12 November 2014 – 31 March 2015). The exhibitions were organised around four themes that featured in the interviews and explored through multimedia content: * the intersection of biographical and historical change (“Generations”) * the role of the past in the present (“Representation of East German History”) * the meaning of being from East Germany (“East German Identity”) * memories of the night the Berlin Wall was opened and subsequent anniversaries of that event (“November 9th”) The exhibition contained multimedia content in the form of a 10-minute long video as well as MP3 sound files from the archives. The video was based on the theme of November 9th and contained extracts of interviews held in 1992 and 2012 with fourteen East German dissidents. The video shows archival footage of the interviewees, as well as of Berlin during the time of the falling of the wall in 1989, and is available from Molly Andrews upon request. The GHIL exhibition consisted of several largescale panels, designed by Stefan Walter, containing archive images and text based on the longitudinal research. The exhibition was preceded by a half-day symposium focused on the personal testimonies of three people who had been key activists in the events leading up to the opening of the wall: nuclear physicist Sebastian Plugbeil, architect and green activist Reinhard Weisshuhn, and psychoanalyst and writer Annette Simon. There were two panels organised around the themes of the representation of East German history (chaired by historian Dorothee Wierling) and cultural memory (chaired by psychologist Jens Brockmeier). Credits: German project co-ordinator and translator (within interviews): Birgit Schmitt Exhibition graphic designer: Stefan Walter Exhibition coordinator: Barbara Droth Photo archivist: Christoph Ochs, Robert Havemann Gesellschaft Portraits: Vaughan Melzer Transcriber and translator: Max Haberich Filmmaker and subtitles: Barbara Droth Exhibition opening photographs: Louisa Ainsworth; Vaughan Melzer; Kerstin Schneider
创建时间:
2024-01-31



