Ossifizierung – A discursive pattern within knowledge production about East and West Germany

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60789/911188

Keywords:

Eastern Germany, discourse, postcolonial theory, intersectionality, Brauner Osten

Abstract

The discussion paper presents the concept of Ossifizierung using the example of the media discourse on the Brown East. Ossifizierung is understood as a discursive practice that considers certain (overall) social phenomena, i.e. (extreme) rightwing positions and practices, as specifically and typically East German. Ossifizierung explains and attributes this peculiarity to the GDR and its legacy and/or to the so-called transformation experiences of East Germans since the 1990s. Furthermore, Ossifizierung is introduced as an analytical concept, which takes up impulses from post- and decolonial theory, to enrich an engagement with current East-West German relations. Given that the category East German is understood as a complex and contradictory subject position, identity category as well as categorization, the paper argues for an intersectional analysis and underlines a (self) critique of the hegemonic within Ossifizierung.

Author Biography

Kathleen Heft, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Dr. Kathleen Heft is a cultural studies scholar. Her research focuses on East Germany as a discursive space, postcolonial theory in post-socialist contexts, migration to the GDR and East Germany as a postmigrant society. Her doctoral thesis Kindsmord in den Medien. Eine Diskursanalyse ost-westdeutscher Dominanzverhältnisse was published in 2020. She also co-edited the volume Feministische Visionen vor und nach 1989 which was published in 2022. She coordinates the DFG-funded project EthnOA – Open access in the ethnological disciplines at the Specialized Information Service for Social and Cultural Anthropology.

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Published

2025-10-08

How to Cite

Heft, K. (2025). Ossifizierung – A discursive pattern within knowledge production about East and West Germany. Berliner Blätter, 91, 53–62. https://doi.org/10.60789/911188

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