Edited by Dirk Göttsche, Rosa Mucignat and Robert Weninger
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages XXXII] 2021
► pp. 751–760
Germany was unique in the postwar period, specifically the four decades spanning the years 1949 to 1989, in that the nation’s geopolitical division into two ideologically opposed states – one capitalist, Western and a member of NATO, the other communist and a member of the Warsaw Pact – was reflected in the competition in the literary field between Western experimental modes of writing, in particular modernism and postmodernism, in the Federal Republic and a far more conventional and state-sanctioned socialist realism in the GDR. The subject of this case study is Christa Wolf, a prominent figurehead of GDR literature, whose trajectory as a writer quintessentially mirrors the contradictions intrinsic to a mode of writing – socialist realism – that on the one hand programmatically aspired to describe the world realistically, albeit with a socialist resolve and agenda, but which was on the other hand, precisely because of the ideological demands and aesthetic strictures placed upon it, effectively unable to do so. Wolf’s development as a writer provides a particularly instructive illustration of these contradictions in that in her oeuvre Wolf moves from a largely conformist socialist realism in her earliest novel to unorthodox and experimental forms of critical realism in her later work, forms which reflect her growing ideological disillusionment and discontent with the state-imposed regulatives of socialist realism.