Abstract

This essay reflects on Morrison’s experience teaching in East Germany in the 1980s through an exchange programme between Brown University and the (former) Wilhelm-Pieck-Universität Rostock. Of particular note is Morrison’s Stasi – or secret police – file. While some sections are typewritten, the pages from the IMs or “unofficial collaborators” are hand-written. Focusing on an incident from September 1985, when Morrison was in charge of the programme’s “wall newspaper,” this essay reflects on a student’s controversial article about “Good Women in the Soviet Union.” This was not received well by university authorities and threatened to undermine the delicately negotiated exchange programme. Research on the nature of secret police files from the former East Germany and other eastern European countries as literary narratives suggests that those drafting such files can be understood as fiction writers, including making totally innocent material sound shady. While one “unofficial collaborator” suggests that Morrison would be a good partner with Rostock in the future, some have suggested that he might have been intending to “turn” Morrison as a spy for East Germany.

Highlights

  • This essay reflects on Morrison’s experience teaching in East Germany in the 1980s through an exchange programme between Brown University and the Wilhelm-Pieck-Universität Rostock

  • Research on the nature of secret police files from the former East Germany and other eastern European countries as literary narratives suggests that those drafting such files can be understood as fiction writers, including making totally innocent material sound shady

  • While one “unofficial collaborator” suggests that Morrison would be a good partner with Rostock in the future, some have suggested that he might have been intending to “turn” Morrison as a spy for East Germany

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Summary

FORUM I ISSUE 29

This essay reflects on Morrison’s experience teaching in East Germany in the 1980s through an exchange programme between Brown University and the (former) Wilhelm-Pieck-Universität Rostock. Focusing on an incident from September 1985, when Morrison was in charge of the programme’s “wall newspaper,” this essay reflects on a student’s controversial article about “Good Women in the Soviet Union.” This was not received well by university authorities and threatened to undermine the delicately negotiated exchange programme. She feared for her boyfriend and, he never got the permission to travel abroad to see her Rather than undergoing his army service alongside his university work in the city where he studied – as was the usual way with such students in the Soviet Union – he had to interrupt his studies to serve in the army for two years in Kamchatka in far eastern Siberia. Is a portion of the file sourced by an IM concerning the wall newspaper, transcribed almost four years after the incident in question

11 FORUM I ISSUE 29 Source
17 FORUM I ISSUE 29 Works Cited
19 FORUM I ISSUE 29 Author Biography
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