Volker Braun, "Das Eigentum/Property":
<http://germany.poetryinternational.org/cwolk/view/20388>.

Volker Braun: <http://germany.poetryinternational.org/cwolk/view/20382>

*****   "What I never had, is being torn away from me.  What I did
not live, I will miss forever."  With these line from his drama
_Property_ (_Das Eigentum_, 1990), playwright Volker Braun renders
his melancholic reaction to the disintegration of the German
Democratic Republic.  The GDR once prided itself as the tenth
strongest world economy, but following the postcommunist turn, or
_Wende_, most of its industries have been brought to a halt, and
hundreds of thousands have found themselves jobless.  The euphoria at
the opening of the Berlin Wall dimmed within a few months, and a pall
seemed to set in over the two Germanys, one which prompted many to
reconsider the disintegration of state socialism.  Whereas most
Germans considered the communist project a failure, many others
proceeded to mourn its passing, nonetheless.  Paradoxically, what
Braun's protagonist lost with the collapse of communism was the
possible past he never really had.

The mass perception of loss has elicited a memory crisis in
contemporary culture.  While retrospective literary texts and
artworks proliferate, museum exhibitions salvage and curate the
wreckage of the GDR as if there were literally no tomorrow.  A new
German word has surfaced to describe this trend: _Ostalgie_, derived
from _Nostalgie_, or nostalgia.  The first syllable drops the letter
_n_ to become _ost_, the word for east.  What remains signifies
something like nostalgia for the "eastern times" of state socialism.
Yet the nostalgic longing for some home that, perhaps, never really
existed distinguishes itself from two other modes of memory that
charge postcommunist culture: mourning and melancholia. . . .

(Charity Scribner, "Left Melancholy," _Loss: The Politics of
Mourning_, University of California Press, 2003, p. 300)   *****

Charity Scribner: <http://web.mit.edu/fll/www/people/CharityScribner.html>

Charity Scribner, _Requiem for Communism_, 2003:
<http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?sid=60FAA42F-67F5-4A28-8EFD-71C1087D6CF6&ttype=2&tid=9916>

_Loss: The Politics of Mourning_, eds. David L. Eng and David
Kazanjian, 2002: <http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9581.html>
--
Yoshie

* Bring Them Home Now! <http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/>
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<http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/calendar.html>,
<http://www.freepress.org/calendar.php>, & <http://www.cpanews.org/>
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