Performing the Politics of Non-Alignment in Cold War Germany

Authors

  • Lisa Skwirblies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5282/gthj/5154

Abstract

This article discusses the history of postcolonial student migration and the under-researched repertoire of decolonial protest performances in Cold War Germany. It shows how the recruitment of hundreds of African and Asian students in the mid-1950s to visit universities in the two Germanies led to political and performative interventions of the Global South students across the Iron Curtain and to political coalitions with the nascent West German student movement. From a specific theatre and performance studies approach, this article explores these decolonial protests through the lens of performance and argues for a new approach to protest culture, one that goes beyond static and reified conceptions and instead allows us to understand the immediate and material effects such protest techniques had for those protesting.

Author Biography

  • Lisa Skwirblies

    Lisa Skwirblies is a theatre historian and currently a post doc researcher at the institute for theatre studies at the LMU Munich. Her research interests are theatre and performance historiography, postcolonial and decolonial theory, and the history of protest. She obtained her PhD from the University of Warwick in 2018 and held an EU Marie Curie COFUND fellowship between 2018 and 2020. 

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Published

2021-07-14