This book explores how writers adhered to, played with, and subverted
the formulaic precepts of educational transformation in the German
Democratic Republic.
Perhaps never before has a state emphasized education to citizenship
more than in the new nation founded in 1949 as the German Democratic
Republic. For forty years, educational and cultural policy played a
pivotal role in effortsto build and sustain a socialist state on German
soil. Party and state held teachers and writers responsible for
demonstrating the superiority of socialism, infusing pupils and readers
with a commitment to the emerging state, andproviding persuasive role
models of der neue Mensch each was challenged to become.
Utilizing an innovative triangular framework, this book demonstrates how
mentor-protegé(e) rubrics, traditionally associated with the socialist
Bildungsroman, came to characterize text-external and text-internal
relations within diverse narrative forms. Thus, leading writers such as
Hermann Kant, Christa Wolf, Brigitte Reimann, and Christoph Hein played
with the genre's patterns of transformation as they engaged with the
intellectual, societal, and aesthetic dilemmas of GDR life. This book
shows that understanding representations of educational transformation
in GDR literature, a topic largely overlooked by critics, is central to
an aesthetic appreciation of that literature more broadly.