Cement in Bloom
Central and Eastern European Culture 1950-2000
Eastern Europe has produced some of the greatest writers, artists and thinkers of the late 20th century, yet relatively few people know about the region’s remarkable contributions. It’s one of the great ironies of history that the Cold War experience of Eastern Europe should so closely echo so many features of the post-Cold War US: they are both societies frozen in time, run by an unelected and unaccountable nomenklatura (or an unelected and unaccountable Bubble-klatura). Unlike the US, however, which is fading away like Victorian Britain, Eastern Europe had the geopolitical good fortune to emerge from its time-warp at the formative moment of the European Union. We’ll be exploring 25 years of cultural and political history, from the uprising of the Gdansk shipyards to the Velvet Revolution of Prague’s Wenceslas Square, in search of the neon flowers in the cement landscapes of the former Eastern bloc.
I. Prague Spring and the end of autarkic development
After twenty years of steady growth and considerable social progress, the Eastern bloc economies run into problems. The nomenklatura becomes increasingly corrupt, and the Stalinist accumulation model starts to unravel. Eastern Europe responds by decentralizing economic authority and borrowing heavily from Western Europe. The making of a global semi-periphery: Russian energy supplies are exchanged for Eastern European manufactured goods.
Media
Andzrej Wajda, Ashes and Diamonds (Poland) 1954
The Lodz school: Kieslowski and Polish cinema
Milos Forman. Turnaround: A Memoir. (Czechoslovakia) 1994
Stanislaw Lem, The Cyberiad (Poland) 1967
Bohumil Hrabal Cutting it Short (Czechoslovakia)
Heiner Mueller (selected prose and poetry)
Texts
Case studies: shipbuilding, coal (the EC’s switchover), exports to Western Europe, the East German electrical industry
Ludmilla Alexeyeva and Paul Goldberg. The Thaw Generation. (Russia)
Milovan Djilas, Memoirs of a Revolutionary, The New Class (1957)
Milovan Djilas, The Unperfect Society (1969)
II. Democratization and samizdat
The former Eastern bloc systems transformed agrarian economies into modern, urban and educated societies – but while the society changed, the political system did not. The result was a massive legitimation crisis in the mid-1970s and a series of ineffectual crackdowns. Dissidents were jailed or exiled, but the resistance continued to grow.
Media
Hamletmachine Heiner Mueller (East Germany) 1977
Dimensions of Dialogue Jan Svankmajer (Czechoslovakia) 1982
Man of Marble Andzrej Wajda (Poland) 1976
Decalogue Krzysztof Kieslowski (Poland) 1987
Alice Jan Svankmajer (Czech Republic) 1988
Abram Tertz, Goodnight! (Russia) 1989
Heiner Mueller (selected prose and poetry)
Texts
Ed. Alex Pravda. The End of the Outer Empire. (Chapter 3, A. Smith)
Thane Gustafson, Crisis Amid Plenty. 1989
Randall W. Stone, Satellites and Commissars. 1996
Lore Uhlmann, Editor-in-chief. “Speaking on Our Own Behalf: The GDR in Upheaval.” In: GDR Review, December 1989 (East Germany)
Kristi S. Long, We All Fought for Freedom. Chapter: Heroines of the Quotidian. (Poland)
III. The Velvet Revolutions and EU Integration
In the brief period between 1987 and 1989, the simmering cauldron of Eastern Europe erupted. The one-party state vanished almost overnight, replaced by a new and more complex landscape of Euro-peripheries, independent countries and future EU members.
Media
Videograms of a Revolution Haun Farocki
The Oak Lucien Pintilie (Romania) 1991
Underground Emir Kusturica (Serbia) 1995
White Krystof Kieslowski (Poland) 1994
Faust Jan Svankmajer (Cezch Republic) 1994
Kolya Jan Sverak (Czech Republic) 1996
Heiner Mueller (selected prose and poetry)
Texts
EU Accession Process
EIB Investment into Eastern Europe
Polish constitution (http://www.sejm.gov.pl/english/konstytucja/kon1.htm)
Timothy Garten Ash, The Magic Lantern
Maciej Lopinski, Marcin Moskit, Mariusz Wilk. Konspira. Trans. Jane Lave.