Christiane Brenner / Michal Pullmann / Anja Tippner (eds.): After Utopia. Czechoslovak Normalization between Experiment and Experience, 1968-1989 (= Bad Wiesseer Tagungen des Collegium Carolinum; Bd. 41), Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2022, VI + 406 S., ISBN 978-3-525-33614-4, EUR 70,00
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Miroslav Vaněk / Pavel Mücke: Velvet Revolutions. An Oral History of Czech Society, Oxford: Oxford University Press 2016
Gregor Feindt: Auf der Suche nach politischer Gemeinschaft. Oppositionelles Denken zur Nation im ostmitteleuropäischen Samizdat 1976-1992, Berlin / Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg 2015
Heidrun Hamersky: Störbilder einer Diktatur. Zur subersiven fotografischen Praxis Ivan Kyncls im Kontext der tschechoslowakischen Bürgerrechtsbewegung der 1970er Jahre, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag 2015
Kevin McDermott / Matthew Stibbe (eds.): Czechoslovakia and Eastern Europe in the Era of Normalisation, 1969-1989, Cham: Palgrave Macmillan 2022
Rüdiger Wenzke: Wo stehen unsere Truppen? NVA und Bundeswehr in der ČSSR-Krise 1968. Mit ausgewählten Dokumenten zur militärischen Lagebeurteilung, Berlin: Ch. Links Verlag 2018
Christiane Brenner / Peter Heumos (Hgg.): Sozialgeschichtliche Kommunismusforschung. Tschechoslowakei, Polen, Ungarn, DDR 1945-1968, München: Oldenbourg 2005
Christiane Brenner: "Zwischen Ost und West". Tschechische politische Diskurse 1945-1948, München: Oldenbourg 2009
Volker Zimmermann / Michal Pullmann (Hgg.): Ordnung und Sicherheit, Devianz und Kriminalität im Staatssozialismus. Tschechoslowakei und DDR 1948/49-1989, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2014
Within the past few years, many Czech historians of communism have somehow been involved in, or at least affected by, a harsh form of Historikerstreit, which has taken the form of a public and scientific debate about so-called "historical revisionism". The nature of the dispute itself relates, above all, to the common understanding and interpretation of the communist past, particularly the period of Normalization. About 30 years after the collapse of the system of a state socialist dictatorship, Czech society was confronted once again with the specter of Normalization, this ghost of the past, which, resembling the ancient deity of Janus, had several, often contradictory, faces.
It soon became obvious that the task of producing a contextual, historical, and social analysis of Normalization is rather complex and often gives rise to new, unexpected questions regarding not only the character of power relations but a whole universe of social interactions as well. However widely accepted or even prevailing it still may appear, the established narrative of Normalization as a period of oppression, stagnation, and "darkness" now seems not to be very revealing, and the very essence of this kind of interpretation has been exposed rather as a set of ideological aspirations and self-confirmations. Its analytical potential nevertheless remains encapsulated in a tricky and looped hypothesis, which is posed not as a question but rather as an already prefabricated answer.
In After Utopia, a transnational group of about 20 historians, mostly from Central Europe, is taking its research aspirations in quite the opposite direction. For them, the discussion of Normalization and its connection to the present "is an ongoing process that continually receives new impulses" (15). By that, they mean more than the already mentioned discussion about "historical revisionism". The global disarray of, for instance, the COVID-19 pandemic, represents a kind of disruptive moment in world history. That was a moment when we, as Europeans, entered into a serious debate about the character and extent of personal freedom and social policy and their complex interrelationship. At such times, we encounter the same problem that played a major role in the state socialist systems in the 1970s and 1980s. The era of late socialism, with all its very own dynamics and crises, is still a phase of industrial and post-industrial modernity. It seems to be fundamentally connected to the everyday problems of our lifetime, and though in the past, it is still somehow connected to the character of our present conditions of living. Inspired by this awareness, the authors of the presented publication decided to characterize the era of Normalization in general, using heterogeneous perspectives from social, political, cultural, and conceptual history as the guiding principle of theory and methodology.
The volume itself is structurally divided into four partitions or chapters and an epilogue. Chapters 2, 3, and 4 are intended as well-founded and rather empirical clarifications of how Normalization was "made" in its political and social context from the perspective of the top-down hierarchy (Chapter 2), how it was "lived" in the sense of the everyday lifestyle and cultural representation (Chapter 3), and finally, how Normalization is now "remembered" in its post-socialist "afterlife" of the neoliberal era (Chapter 4). The first, introductory part also includes a contribution by Martin Schulze Wessel ("The Genesis of the Normalization") - an essential analysis and a brief, yet still worthwhile summary of how Normalization was gradually generated as a form of political praxis between 1968 and 1970.
The first chapter, entitled "Normality and Normalization," embraces a significantly theoretical, explanatory standpoint of conceptual and intellectual history. That is part of the reason I will focus on this chapter in particular. In his paper called "Normalization between Experience, Expectation, and Ostalgie," Thomas Lindenberger observes the conceptual problem of normality as such. He traces the very genesis and transformations of the term itself, and its relevance in the modern industrial era. Based on the profound theoretical works of Michel Foucault, Lindenberger explains that "experiences with and expectations of normality and normalization are nothing new". Quite the contrary, "they form part of the longue durée of modern, post-traditional societies" (23). According to Lindenberger, "Normalization as a concept, an expectation, an experience, and an argument [...] is equally the product of modern industrial society and an agent of the labor movement" (20). Normalization as such is, therefore, the most present symbol of modernity since it refers to the general and continually growing tendency to "datafication" as well as to "the technical standardization in everyday measurement processes" (21).
Standardization, as a generalization of the forms of human knowledge, also defined the "horizons of expectations" during the tumultuous and often violent years of the twentieth century. Predictable and normal life was more than just a popular desire; it was an actual goal to attain; where life floats in the channels of predictability, there is an actual, solid chance of a decent existence for individuals and families that also seems to be more obtainable. Thus, normalcy as the desirable horizon of the living standard and the social welfare state is also a key factor of social and political stability. It is a factor that should not be omitted if we aim to address Normalization not only as a critical and contradictory period of political history but also as the lived experience of the masses.
Lindenberger's observation of the conceptual and social framework of Normality and Normalization draws our attention to the crucial point of understanding the Normalization era as such, and to the fact that despite all the oppressive authority and executive power of state apparatuses and secret police, all of which remained so vividly imprinted in the public memory, Normalization as a social phenomenon was characterized by more than just that. As an era of its own significance, Normalization established a kind of social contract between the state power and the masses, a social contract that reflected "horizons of expectation". Reaching these horizons was completely in the interests of the ruling structures of power and was, therefore, part of the practice through which the state power legitimized and consolidated itself. Such a fact is well presented, especially in the articles of Jakub Rákosník ("The Social Policy of Czechoslovak Normalization") and Filip Keller ("The Making of the Czechoslovak Socialist Working Class"). Therefore, Normalization cannot be reflected upon without taking into consideration the "horizons of expectations" created by its historical actors and agents. Only within these horizons is it possible to analyze Normalization properly.
After Utopia is a collection of essays and articles of considerable significance. It demonstrates the unrelenting validity of the Foucaultian perspective for social and historical analysis. As the symbiosis of intellectual and social history, the publication will suit anyone who desires to understand the complexity of the late socialism era in the space of Central Europe.
Ondřej Holub