Abstract

This article analyses the issue of how the “post-socialist" civil society of the former GDR can be reconstructed to reduce dependence of the media on the state and on future private ownership, thereby maximising freedom of communication. The media had a powerful impact on the transitional phase following reunification. Before 1989 West German television and radio stations were "windows to the West". After reunification East Germans preferred to have their own newspapers, to watch their own television programmes or to listen to their own radio programmes. There has been some criticism about the quality of the media, but the majority of the contemporary audience is satisfied now. To meet the expectations of their audience the journalists themselves have learned to devote special attention to East German problems. One problem of concern is media concentration. Privatisation entails the danger that monopolising trends in mass media, especially in newspaper publishing, will continue in the new East German Lánder. Deregulation and quality programming offer an opportunity for a major breakthrough and new forms of media organisation and management. The period of acclimatisation following the reunification has, however, been too short for the mass media. Nevertheless, owing to specific characteristics of reunification, the transition East Germans have had to make has been largely successful.

Highlights

  • This paper analyses the changes in media systems as well as the influence o f the media on the transition process, i.e. responses to new economic, political, and social circumstances

  • the peaceful revolution o f 1989 (The) news of the Berlin wall coming down on 9 November 1989 was based on a misunderstanding between Politburo member Gunter Schabowski and the media, a spontaneous action not supported by the former Soviet Union

  • As those who remained in the German Democratic Republic (GDR) watched interviews with deportees, political opposition grew in the GDR

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Summary

Introduction

This paper analyses the changes in media systems as well as the influence o f the media on the transition process, i.e. responses to new economic, political, and social circumstances. The main question is whether and how a “post-socialist” civil society, like the former GDR, can be reconstructed to reduce the dependence of the media on the state, while minimising dependence on future private ownership to maximise freedom of communication

Special role o f mass media in the peaceful revolution o f 1989
Development of the media structure
The Media Control Council and the Public Advisory Board
Article 36 of the Unification Treaty
The new East German journalists
The new broadcasting
Newspapers
Findings
Summary
Full Text
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