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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, Apr 2, 2017 at 9:12 AM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Socialisms]: Sockol on Imre, 'TV Socialism'
To: [email protected]


Anikó Imre.  TV Socialism.  Durham  Duke University Press, 2016.
328 pp.  $25.95 (paper), ISBN 978-0-8223-6099-5.

Reviewed by David Sockol (Drew University)
Published on H-Socialisms (April, 2017)
Commissioned by Gary Roth

East Bloc Television

One of the most overlooked but seemingly indelible legacies of the
Cold War is the scholarly convention of examining phenomena
associated with Eastern Bloc nations through the conceptual paradigm
of totalitarianism. Emerging out of a combination of Western animus
toward the Soviet Union and its allies, the often inaccessible nature
of archival and other sources in these closed states, and the
demonstrable authoritarianism of their governments, the totalitarian
paradigm casts dictatorial political figures and communist ideology
as the determining factors in the creation, character, and
development of Eastern Bloc societies. While undoubtedly capturing
definite aspects of the Eastern Bloc, the totalitarian paradigm also
obscures many others. Illustrating this fact are revisionist works
produced over the last several decades by researchers such as Sheila
Fitzpatrick (_The Russian Revolution: 1917-1932_, 1982), Boris Groys
(_The Total Art of Stalinism: Avant-Garde, Aesthetic Dictatorship,
and Beyond_, 1992), and Lars Lih (_Lenin Rediscovered: What Is to Be
Done? In Context_, 2006). In their respective political, art, and
intellectual histories, these scholars moved beyond the myopic foci
of the totalitarian paradigm and produced rewarding studies stressing
popular agency, identifying continuity with pre-communist society and
recognizing commonalities with Western cultures. Shelia Fitzpatrick,;
Boris Groys,; and Lars Lih,.

With _TV Socialism_, Anikó Imre provides a valuable contribution to
this revisionist corpus by composing a study of television within the
Eastern Bloc that consciously undermines the totalitarian image of
Eastern Bloc societies as monolithic entities subject to centralized
control in accordance with Marxist-Leninist ideology. Examining both
the production and content of numerous television programs across the
Eastern Bloc, Imre argues that it was not government direction or
official ideology that exerted the greatest effect upon them, but a
host of decidedly nontotalitarian factors including audience
preferences, the nationalisms of individual Bloc states, and even
pan-Europe cultural trends. Alongside this path-breaking use of
television as a means of illuminating the plurality of dynamics at
work within Eastern Bloc societies, Imre also considers how
television programs registered changes within these societies,
particularly in regard to shifting conceptions of what the "good
life" under socialism should entail and the ensuing tensions
regarding gender roles. Although Imre's expansive scope rests on a
relatively small number of case studies, this ultimately does not
detract from what is a strikingly original and valuable cultural
history of the Eastern Bloc.

Writing that "instead of confirming the blanket oppression of the
people by authoritarian or dictatorial leaders," a study of Eastern
Bloc television will serve to "question ... our received wisdom"
about the socialist societies of Eastern Europe, Imre announces her
participation in the ongoing revision of the totalitarian paradigm at
the outset of her monograph (pp. 3, 1). This participation is most
immediately visible in her striking assertion that aside from
controls over news coverage and some educational programming, Eastern
Bloc television "generally operate[d] in a liberalized fashion, with
little or no censorship" (p. 18). Drawing upon interviews with
numerous contemporary television producers, Imre explains this
surprising fact by arguing that Eastern Bloc governments considered
entertainment programs on television as lowbrow novelties and "not
even deserving [censorship] policies" (p. 33). While the totalitarian
model essentially posits that no detail of Eastern Bloc life was too
insignificant to escape government control, Imre not only foregrounds
the evidence to the contrary but also emphasizes the familiar values
animating this contradiction. As she relates, it was a certain
elitist disdain toward television, an attitude also held by many in
the West, and a reluctance to afford it the same status as media,
such as film and theater, that were "deserving" of government
attention that allowed Eastern Bloc television to operate in ways
defying the stereotypes of totalitarianism.

Although Imre's conclusion regarding the relative lack of political
oversight of Eastern Bloc television is perhaps her most striking
contribution to the revisionist project, it ultimately serves as the
basis for even more arresting findings. Recognizing the reduced role
of politics in Eastern Bloc television launches Imre toward exploring
the numerous other factors and dynamics that molded and were
contained within it instead. In doing so, Imre is also highlighting
phenomena within Eastern Bloc societies that further subvert the
assumptions of the totalitarian paradigm. This is especially clear in
her argument that the absence of "top-down" control over television
in the Eastern Bloc allowed for "bottom-up momentum throughout the
socialist period, giving viewers some leverage in defining the
medium's development" (p. 10).

The lack of strict government guidance, Imre thus asserts, allowed
audience preferences to play a significant role in determining the
content of Eastern Bloc television, a claim she illustrates with
examples of viewer feedback resulting in programming changes.
Discussing, for example, the Hungarian program _Family Circle
_(1974-94), which initially centered on roundtable debates on
parenting issues interspersed with dramatized vignettes, Imre relates
that "viewers responded most positively to the dramatized segments,
which made the creators gradually shift emphasis to these" (p. 64).
Similarly, Imre correlates the predominance of what one contemporary
critic called "warmed over bourgeois values" on East German
television by the 1960s with the earlier attempts at "revolutionary
television" being met with "viewers' rejection ... and demands for
light entertainment" (p. 236). In contrast to the totalitarian
paradigm's assumption that Eastern Bloc states either ignored or
manipulated popular opinion, Imre's investigation reveals strikingly
contrary examples of ordinary Bloc citizens unreservedly expressing
their preferences and even effecting change by doing so.

While Imre thus contributes to the mounting evidence suggesting that
the totalitarian paradigm's conception of the Eastern Bloc neglects a
great deal in regards to internal dynamics, her study also points to
the need to question its effective isolation and alienation of the
Eastern Bloc from Western Europe. Often overlooking both the shared
history and contemporary intercourse between the East and West, the
totalitarian paradigm tends to sharply oppose the two camps and
emphasize their differences and divergent development. Imre
explicitly rejects this "national containment" and argues that
"transnational affiliations" are visible within Eastern Bloc
television, destabilizing the binary image of Cold War Europe (pp. 4,
12). This effort to recuperate the commonalities between East and
West bears compelling fruit in her integration of certain Eastern
Bloc television programs into the wider, pan-European attitudes
regarding the didactic role of television. As noted above,
educational programs were one of the few aspects of television
programming in which Bloc governments consistently intervened,
sponsoring their development, regulating their content, and generally
attempting to employ television as a "massive school for the masses"
(p. 41).

Viewed in light of the totalitarian paradigm, such a tele-educational
drive would be seen as little more than attempts as state propaganda.
Imre, however, complicates and undermines such a view by, first,
noting the politically neutral content of many of these programs,
which ranged from promoting literacy to broadcasting lectures on art
and science. More striking, however, is her argument that such
programs are but examples of a Europe-wide commitment to "public
service broadcasting (PSB)." Describing PSB as "the government-led
mission to inform and educate" via television, Imre argues that this
was "a common denominator across all of [Europe's] television
cultures ... [and] reaches back to the pre-Cold War era" (p. 17). She
thus folds the paternalist pedagogy within Eastern Bloc television
into the wider European tradition of government patronage for
didactic programming and comes to cite a host of state-funded
programs across Western Europe with avowedly educational intentions
to emphasize the values and activities shared across the iron
curtain. In doing so, Imre subverts the totalitarian paradigm's
aggressive othering of the Eastern Bloc in regard to the West and its
tendency to portray Eastern Bloc culture as _sui generis _products of
communist authoritarianism.

Imre continues to challenge received notions of the Eastern Bloc as
she turns to the homogenizing implications of the "Eastern Bloc"
concept itself. Not only with its stress on the entirety of the
Eastern Bloc as an alien "other" in regard to the West, but also in
its emphasis on the Soviet hegemony over, and its oppressive
imposition of communism upon, other Bloc states, the totalitarian
paradigm invites a view of the Eastern Bloc stressing uniformity and
subservience. Imre is particularly keen to counter these
connotations, arguing that Eastern Bloc states vigorously asserted
themselves by employing television to foster vibrant and exclusivist
nationalisms that drew upon their respective traditional cultures.
Once again stressing continuity between communist and precommunist
culture, Imre argues that "established nationalistic literary
cultures" within Bloc nations were "seamlessly transferred to the new
medium [of television]," establishing it "as a key terrain for
sustaining nationalisms" within the Eastern Bloc (pp. 134-137).
Citing the Hungarian historical dramas _A Tenkes kapitánya _(The
captain of the Tenkes, 1964) and the Polish _Janosik _(1974) as prime
examples of this phenomenon, she relates how these programs chose as
their subject matter historical events and figures long romanticized
into mythic narratives of patriotic nationalism.

Even more striking than her illumination of persistent nationalism
within Eastern Bloc states ostensibly devoted to communist
universalism is Imre's disclosure that these nationalisms routinely
employed a specific adversary as a means of uniting patriotic
sentiment. Beginning with an analysis of the traditional nationalist
narratives utilized in Eastern Bloc television, she concludes that
they invariably centered on lionized figures "who defended the nation
and resisted the evil intruder or oppressor" (p. 137). This
consistent positing of conflict with an outside force, she argues,
was a direct expression of Eastern Bloc states' attitudes towards the
Soviet Union, which was implicitly the antagonist of these
nationalistic programs wherein the "the dominant allegorical
framework remained national resistance against Soviet domination" (p.
135).

As illustrations of this thesis, Imre continues to cite _A Tenkes
kapitánya _and _Janosik_, relating the former's recounting of
nineteenth-century Hungarians fighting Habsburg rule and the latter's
focus on a Robin Hood-like figure who robbed from the foreign or
foreign-affiliated nobility for the benefit of the poor. These
conflicts between native patriots and external enemies, she asserts,
spoke directly to the current feelings of resentment among Bloc
citizens over their forced subordination to the Soviet Union,
strengthening their nationalistic appeal by encouraging affective
identification. Imre thus highlights both the persistent cultivation
of individualized identities among Bloc states and their expressions
of resentment in regard to Soviet hegemony. In both instances, she
provides a valuable corrective to the tendency inherent in the Cold
War-era views of the totalitarian paradigm towards dismissing these
"satellite" states as a single, conflated mass lacking unique
identities and the will to assert them.

As in other revisionist scholarship, Imre's disruption of received
ideas ultimately functions as more than a simple critique. By
undermining the totalitarian paradigm, by removing an image of the
Eastern Bloc that has obscured many of its constituent dynamics, she
also is opening up a space for research that would have previously
been unthinkable. Imre herself realizes one aspect of this potential
in her extended investigation into how television reflected a
significant shift in aspirations within Eastern Bloc states and how
this interacted with established gender roles. She relates that by
the 1960s, most Eastern Bloc governments, in their continued efforts
to court popular support, had moved from promising egalitarianism and
industrial might toward emphasizing the availability of abundant
"daily comforts" and the pursuit of "consumer lifestyles."

This new conception of what the "good life" under socialism should
entail, Imre continues, privileged the domestic sphere, the site in
which comfort and consumption took place, effectively positing it as
"the microcosm of the socialist nation" in that domestic success was
essentially equated with national success. She goes on to explain
that this created an acute tension in Bloc societies between women's
traditional role as caregiver in the domestic sphere, which this new
valuation reinforced, and the fact that Bloc women's high
participation in the workforce often occluded their fulfillment of
this role. Imre argues that television registered this tension and
rendered it visible in a number of what she terms "socialist soap
operas," serialized dramas centering on female characters. In an
extended analysis of one such program, the Hungarian _78-as körzet
_(District 78, 1982), concerning Ilus, a housewife who decides to
begin working outside the home, she notes how ambivalently the
resulting conflict is addressed in the form of Ilus's husband, Deszo,
who repeatedly voices complaints about how Ilus's new work causes her
to neglect her domestic duties. Deszo and his complaints, Imre
argues, are alternatively treated sympathetically and mocked within
the show, reflecting the tension between the privileging of the
domestic sphere and the reality that high female employment often
rendered the role of a traditional housewife a retrograde fantasy.
Thus realizing the potential contained within abandoning the
totalitarian paradigm's ossified image of the Eastern Bloc as solely
characterized by sclerotic ideology and stifling oppression, Imre is
able to perceive the shifting values within Bloc societies and the
reactions they provoked, resulting in rich and nuanced analyses.

While thus illustrating the superlative aspects of her study, Imre's
examination of the fraught nature of gender roles in the Eastern Bloc
and its representation on television also demonstrates some of its
greatest weaknesses. Besides _78-as körzet_, she only subjects a
handful of other programs to close readings to support her argument,
raising questions as to how applicable her otherwise cogent
conclusion is. A similar issue mars Imre's previously discussed
analysis of nationalist dramas, wherein the two programs already
mentioned, _A Tenkes kapitánya _and _Janosik_, are the only ones
analyzed to support her, again, incisive and compelling argument.
Both of these examples highlight the recurring problem of her study
in which only slim evidence supports broad conclusions. It is,
however, easy to forgive Imre for this when one considers the fact
that she has composed an engaging and path-breaking study offering
further insight into the multiplicity of phenomena long obscured
behind the notion of totalitarianism.

Citation: David Sockol. Review of Imre, Anikó, _TV Socialism_.
H-Socialisms, H-Net Reviews. April, 2017.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=47411

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.

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