Life behind the iron curtain
Karl Schl枚gel, Katja Hoyer and Adam Curtis reveal everyday life behind the iron curtain, and after its collapse, with Adam Rutherford
Adam Rutherford asks what ordinary life was like in the Soviet Union and how far its collapse helps to explain Russia today.
Karl Schl枚gel is one of the world鈥檚 leading historians of the Soviet Union. In his latest book, The Soviet Century: Archaeology of a Lost World (translated by Rodney Livingstone), he recreates an encyclopaedic and richly detailed history of daily life, both big and small. He examines the planned economy, the railway system and the steel city of Magnitogorsk as well as cookbooks, parades and the ubiquitous perfume Red Moscow.
The historian Katja Hoyer presents a more nuanced picture of life in East Germany, far from the caricature often painted in the West. In Beyond the Wall: East Germany, 1949-1990 she acknowledges the oppression and hardship often faced by ordinary people, but argues that this now-vanished society was also home to its own distinctive and rich social and cultural landscape.
But what did it feel like to live through the fall of communism and then democracy? These are the questions Adam Curtis looked to reveal in his 7-part television series, Russia 1985-1999 TraumaZone (available on 大象传媒 iPlayer). The archive footage from thousands of hours of tapes filmed by 大象传媒 crews across the country records the lives of Russians at every level of society as their world collapsed around them.
Producer: Katy Hickman
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- Mon 1 May 2023 09:00大象传媒 Radio 4
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