What Remains

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A01=Jonathan Bach
Author_Jonathan Bach
Category=JBCC1
Category=JBSD
Category=JHMC
Category=NHD
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
popular culture
urban sociology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780231182713
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Aug 2019
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What happens when an entire modern state's material culture becomes abruptly obsolete? How do ordinary people encounter what remains? In this ethnography, Jonathan Bach examines the afterlife of East Germany following the fall of the Berlin Wall, as things and places from that vanished socialist past continue to circulate and shape the politics of memory.

What Remains traces the unsettling effects of these unmoored artifacts on the German present, arguing for a rethinking of the role of the everyday as a site of reckoning with difficult pasts. Bach juxtaposes four sites where the stakes of the everyday appear: products commodified as nostalgia, amateur museums dedicated to collecting everyday life under socialism, the "people's palace" that captured the national imagination through its destruction, and the feared and fetishized Berlin Wall. Moving from the local, the intimate, and the small to the national, the impersonal, and the large, this book's interpenetrating chapters show the unexpected social and political force of the ordinary in the production of memory. What Remains offers a unique vantage point on the workings of the everyday in situations of radical discontinuity, contributing to new understandings of postsocialism and the intricate intersection of material remains and memory.
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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