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Stefan Wolle

    October 22, 1950
    Der große Plan
    Die heile Welt der Diktatur
    Grundwissen DDR kompakt
    Aufbruch nach Utopia
    Everyday life in the GDR in 200 Objects
    The ideal world of dictatorship
    • 2023

      The material legacy of the GDR enjoys almost cult-like veneration today. From the “Goldbroiler” restaurants and the air-cushioned lawnmower to crockery and cutlery in GDR design – all these vanished objects are from a country that no longer exists. This anthology is intended to give an impression and overview of what life looked like and how it developed during the GDR’s 40 years. It also shows what influence the party and its ideology had on people's everyday lives. The selection of about 200 objects from the most diverse areas of life demonstrates the limitations placed on people’s lives through the GDR’s economy of scarcity, but also recounts how people were still able to fulfil their wishes and dreams. In this way, a colourful and diverse picture of the reality of life in the GDR from the end of the war to the fall of the Wall is established on the basis of these objects. With the help of detailed photographs by Thorsten Heideck and Adrian Serini, as well as texts from historian

      Everyday life in the GDR in 200 Objects
    • 2022
    • 2020

      Umbruch Ost / Transformation East

      Lebenswelten im Wandel. Begleitband zur gleichnamigen Ausstellung / Lives in Transition. Companion volume to the eponymous exhibition

      Umbruch Ost / Transformation East
    • 2019

      Life in the German Democratic Republic was a permanent balancing act between conformity and revolt. Political pressure and an economy of scarcity coexisted alongside the more pleasant and seemingly idyllic aspects of everyday life. Stefan Wolle takes these contradictory images of a now defunct world and weaves them into a coherent picture. He shows that the meticulously kept death strip at the border and lovingly tended allotment gardens were two sides of the same coin, that dictatorship and daily life necessarily went hand in hand. Wolle tells the history of the last two decades of the GDR from the inside out, as the collective biography of its inhabitants. The result is a thoroughly researched and ambitious scholarly work that doesn’t shy away from radical subjectivity. He describes the attempts of East German citizens to create a modicum of intellectual and spiritual freedom, takes stock of the shattered dream of a human, democratic socialism, and reclaims the multifaceted lives of those who lived under Communist Party rule. Originally published in 1998, this seminal history of everyday life in East Germany is now available for the first time in English.

      The ideal world of dictatorship