
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Donate to Personal Landscapes.
Eighties movies portrayed East Germany as a vast open-air prison populated by monotonous grey blurs without individuality or agency, but the GDR was not a static land that time forgot.
Katja Hoyer's brilliant book Beyond The Wall tells its story through the lives of ordinary people. She also grapples with the ongoing tension between a Germany that sees the GDR as an aberration, and the desire of East Germans to hold on to their memories of a life they lived in colour.
We spoke about daily life in East Germany, why the Berlin Wall reduced political tensions, and why tinned soup became a modern political controversy.
By Ryan Murdock5
1515 ratings
Donate to Personal Landscapes.
Eighties movies portrayed East Germany as a vast open-air prison populated by monotonous grey blurs without individuality or agency, but the GDR was not a static land that time forgot.
Katja Hoyer's brilliant book Beyond The Wall tells its story through the lives of ordinary people. She also grapples with the ongoing tension between a Germany that sees the GDR as an aberration, and the desire of East Germans to hold on to their memories of a life they lived in colour.
We spoke about daily life in East Germany, why the Berlin Wall reduced political tensions, and why tinned soup became a modern political controversy.

5,461 Listeners

3,219 Listeners

303 Listeners

4,773 Listeners

591 Listeners

85 Listeners

368 Listeners

2,841 Listeners

334 Listeners

2,482 Listeners

954 Listeners

339 Listeners

120 Listeners

984 Listeners

535 Listeners