Through experimental writing and conceptual photography, my PhD uses the example of my own biography to investigate the consequences of societal transformation processes in the German Democratic Republic (GDR). The focus is on the period of regime change known as the »Wendezeit« in the late 1980's to the early 1990's in East Germany. To date, this subject has been analysed primarily by scholars of history and cultural sciences, while approaches to this field by artistic researchers are still rare.
With my research I would like to reveal causes for the outbreaks of violence that accompanied this radical shift. The objective of my PhD is thus the attempt to submit critical testimony to the silence about seldom-discussed side effects of the transformation during and after the turnaround which Germans call the »Wende«. Based on the example of (my own) individual history, it demonstrates the way in which authoritarian regimes and structures impacted on three generations of citizens, and which effects they have generated in the subjects.
Throughout an experimental narrative, outbreaks of (appar-ently) senseless violence are treated as side effects of disrup-tive transformation processes, just as are ambivalent situations in which actors of social change recognise themselves to be simultaneously victims and perpetrators of violent incidents.
Since personal memories and historical documents served as the basis of this work, the central challenge of my artistic research was to carve out generalisable elements from individ- ual examples, and to try out and experiment with various textual and photographic formats to find an adequate way to present the research material. Important sources of inspiration for this process included works like Alexander Kluge’s »Lebensläufe« (‘Case Histories’), Primo Levi’s »Ist das ein Mensch?« (‘If This Is a Man’), Walter Benjamin’s »Denkbilder« [Thought-Images], Klaus Theweleit’s »Männerphantasien (‘Male Fantasies’), Georges Didi-Huberman’s »Bilder trotz allem« (‘Images in Spite of All’), Claude Lanzman’s documentary film »Shoah«, and W.G. Sebald’s novel »Austerlitz«.
The result of my research (the artefact) is an experimental book which attempts to portray the multidimensional nature, polyphony and complexity of the subject, and intends to offer the readers an opportunity to deal with the material in the way they desire, and perhaps to make it useful for their own work and research.