Envisaged Futures at the End of the Cold War

Between 1989 and 1991, the Cold War dissolved and the polarized world order that had characterized the second half of the twentieth century melted away. At the same time, an unprecedented socioeconomic transformation was taking place across the societies of Eastern Central Europe. Up to now, historiographical scholarship on the end of the Cold War has tended to concentrate on the factors that brought about the transformation, and to examine the developments in international politics from an ex post perspective.

The project “Envisaged Futures at the end of the Cold War”, by contrast, sets its focus on the interaction between spaces of experience and horizons of expectation at a time of accelerated and indeed dramatic change. The project investigates individual and collective designs for the future, their discursive and emotional adoption, and connected practices related to the configuration, planning, and preservation of the future at a dynamic time of upheaval, in which much seemed possible and to be hoped for. The project does not only illuminate visions of the future sui generis as they appeared in politics, centres of expertise, civil society, and the media, but also looks into the functions of the envisaged futures, the spheres of action and outcomes arising out of this. The period of investigation stretches from 1987/88, when General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party Mikhail Gorbachev spoke of a “common European home” and proclaimed a “new world order” before the UN General Assembly, through to the socioeconomic transformations in Germany and the Development Programme the UN proclaimed in 1994.

The goal of the project is not just to illuminate future scenarios, hopes, and fears with their respective functionalization during this time of upheaval. It also seeks to make a contribution toward understanding current political polarizations – whether in international relations, in the German-Russian relationship, or in the political cultures of West and East Germany, with a view to their former futures and the impact that they had.

The project, which is centered at the Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History, is led by Elke Seefried and Agnes Bresselau von Bressensdorf. It Includes three subprojects:

- A New World Order? Envisaged Futures of the US and West Germany at the End of the Cold War, 1988-1994 (Researcher: Peter Ridder)

- Envisaged Futures at the End of the Cold War: The National Self-Understanding in the German East-West Transformation Process, 1989-1995 (Researcher: Helena Gand)

- High expectations and broken trust? Cultural relations between Germany and the Soviet Union/Russia during the transformation process (Researcher: Susanne Maslanka)