posted on 2013-08-20, 13:24authored byTatiana Matejskova
This article examines micro-politics of belonging in the post-socialist outskirts of Berlin-
Marzahn, one of new urban immigrant settlement areas in Europe. More specifically, it focuses
on what locals perceive as an acceptance-precluding conspicuous presence of nominally white
immigrants of German ancestry from the former Soviet Union, the Aussiedler (resettlers). Thus
the paper outlines how long-term residents read and interpret these immigrants’ everyday
embodiments, constructing what I call micro-economies of embodied difference, in order to
mark the latter as Eastern-European and thus non-belonging. In order to make sense of such
practices, the article examines the embeddedness of this suburban locality in extra-local politics
of belonging, showing how Marzahn and its old-time residents have themselves become postwall
Berlin’s (and Germany’s) internal Others, saturated with uncommodifiable traces of now
denigrated state-socialist Easternness. I suggest that in such a context these residents’ practice of
ascription of the unwanted Easternness to recent immigrants works to deflect it in order to
buttress their own claims to full membership citizenship in the unified Germany they feel they
have been excluded from so far.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Geography and Environment
Citation
MATEJSKOVA, T., 2013. The unbearable closeness of the East: embodied micro-economies of difference, belonging, and intersecting marginalities in post-socialist Berlin. Urban Geography, 34 (1), pp.30-52.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Urban Geography on 11 Apr 2013, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02723638.2013.778630