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Call for Papers

"Divided Dreamworlds: The Cultural Cold War in East and
West"
International Conference
Roosevelt Study Center (RSC)
Dutch Institute for War Documentation (NIOD)
Research Institute for History and Culture (OGC)
Utrecht (The Netherlands)
26-27 September 2008

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On Friday 26 and Saturday 27 September 2008, the Roosevelt
Study Center (RSC, Middelburg), the Dutch Institute for War
Documentation (NIOD, Amsterdam) and the Research Institute
for History and Culture (OGC, Utrecht) organize a conference
in Utrecht (The Netherlands) on ‘Divided Dreamworlds - The
Cultural Cold War in East and West’.

In recent years there has been increasing scholarly
attention given to the ‘Cultural Cold War’. In general terms
this phrase is used to refer to the ideological struggle
between the US and Soviet blocs following the Second World
War, and how this struggle was conducted with ‘cultural
arguments’ in East and West. This trend has broadened our
understanding of the political relevance of Cold War
cultural manifestations, but it has also raised questions
concerning the value of the Cold War, and its implicit
East-West divide, as a valid periodisation for examining
cultural history. Some scholars have argued that a full
understanding of cultural activity can only take place if a
longue durée analysis is used which takes into account
developments long before the Second World War. Others have
focused on the similar mission of East and West within their
ideological contest to claim the heritage of universal
Enlightenment rationality, leading to the potential for a
cross-bloc comparative analysis of common cultural themes.

To be sure, the Cold War, as a unique ideological contest
between East and West, remains a very significant backdrop
to the cultural history of the 1945-1990 period. In this
context, cultural activity played a crucial role in shaping
the meta-narrative of both blocs. This was done either
actively, by those who consciously engaged their art or
intellectual output with the political environment, or
passively, through the co-optation of cultural forms for
political purposes. Culture became the sign through which
the ideology of the Cold War was represented and understood
in society at large, and contributed significantly to the
process of ‘mobilisation’: the concentration of energies in
the service of countering external as well as domestic
threats.

Susan Buck-Morss offers an ideal starting point for
investigating these insights with her book Dreamworld and
Catastrophe: The Passing of Mass Utopia in East and West
(MIT Press: Cambridge MA, 2000). In this work she portrays
the mass-utopian experiments of American-style capitalism
and Soviet-style communism as two paths that led from the
same industrial modernity. Both systems claimed exclusive
access to happiness, optimal social organisation, and the
end of scarcity. Both systems promoted a dreamworld of
messages, images, and artefacts to transmit their inevitable
triumph to a mass audience abroad, co-opting along the way
all possible means and media to do so. By using this
perspective, the hindrance of a high/low culture division
dissolves into a general analysis of how all cultural forms
were drawn into and utilised by the competing dreamworld
meta-narratives. After all, high culture relied on mass
media and a mass audience for its impact to be registered.

This conference seeks to explore the ways in which the Cold
War heightened the contest between these cultural
dreamworlds of East and West while at the same time exposing
their structural similarities. The conference encourages
papers on other cultural agents who were active in this
field but escaped (or tried to escape) the rigid East-West
divide. This will allow a greater appreciation for the many
actors involved and the multifarious agendas and ideals that
were being expressed within, through, and around the norms
of bloc politics.

The conference aims to build on the results of the April
2007 conference ‘European Cold War Cultures’, organized by
the Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung (ZZF) in Potsdam,
which specifically focused on European cultural identities
in the context of the Cold War. We would like to attract
contributions that address the following issues:

East-West divide:

- How did cultural forms and cultural activity contribute
towards portraying the respective capitalist and communist
dreamworlds?

- What was the role of the state in promoting these
processes, either alone or with private partners, and how
did this vary from country to country?

- What was the relation between portraying the utopian
dreamworld and demonising the enemy through stereotypes? Did
the one rely wholly on the other?

- Is Cold War essentially to be understood in terms of the
bipolar divide, or have we gained new insights on the
structural similarities between East and West which have
gradually revealed themselves since the end of the Cold War?
What was the range and impact of cultural dialogue or ‘flow
across the borders’ (Marsha Siefert)?

Culture and politics:

- To what extent did the context of the Cold War reduce
culture to a political message, so that it became little
more than propaganda? What were the effects of the
‘mobilisation’ of culture and cultural producers for
political goals? How possible was it to escape the
straight-jacket of Cold War interpretations?

- Alternatively, what did the political engagement of
cultural producers contribute to the discourse of
ideological struggle? How did cultural forms shape the
expression of political agendas?

Longue durée:

- Which developments before WWII have to be taken into
account for a well-founded understanding of the cultural
Cold War?

- How did these issues change over time, from the tensions
of the early Cold War, through the period of détente, to the
1980s?

Please, send your proposal (c. 1.500 words) and a short
curriculum vitae before 1 December 2007 to Joes Segal.


Contact:

Joes Segal
Department of History and Art History
University of Utrecht
3512 BS Utrecht
The Netherlands
Email: [email protected]

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