Talk and Reading: Contract Work in the GDR
Tickets
Voices and Perspectives from Mozambique and Angola
Marcia Schenck, Von Luanda und Maputo nach Ost-Berlin, book cover
October 30, 2025
6 PM
The history of contract work in the GDR continues to resonate today. Beginning in the late 1970s, thousands of people from Mozambique, Angola, and other so-called “socialist brother states” came to the GDR with the aim of temporarily settling there to work and receive vocational training.
This event is dedicated to the memories of former contract workers, who later returned to Mozambique.
Comic artist Birgit Weyhe approaches this chapter of German-African contemporary history in her award-winning work Madgermanes, which combines African and European storytelling traditions through its striking visual language.
The historian Marcia C. Schenck, who has conducted research in Mozambique and Angola, presents her book Von Luanda und Maputo nach Ost-Berlin [From Luanda and Maputo to East Berlin] in conversation with Elisabeth Nechutnys. By giving voice to former contract workers, the book offers a rare shift in perspective on the history of the GDR.
At the heart are personal experiences: life in workers’ dormitories, everyday routines in the factories, moments of isolation and connection. The event introduces both books and explores the ambivalences and lasting effects of these biographical and political entanglements.
Marcia C. Schenck is a professor of Global History at the University of Potsdam. Her research interests include global and African history, oral history, labor and education history, as well as migration and refugee studies. She earned her PhD in History from Princeton University in the USA and holds an MSc in African Studies from the University of Oxford.
She published a study on Mozambican and Angolan contract workers titled Von Luanda und Maputo nach Ost-Berlin (2025), which has also been released in English and Portuguese. Schenck has published peer-reviewed articles on the topic in Africa, African Economic History, and Labor History, among other journals.
Together with Eric Burton, Anne Dietrich, and Immanuel Harisch, she co-edited a volume exploring the multifaceted relationships between the GDR and the African continent, entitled Navigating Socialist Encounters: Moorings and (Dis)Entanglements between Africa and East Germany during the Cold War (2021).
In addition, she is the founder of the Global History Dialogues project (https://globalhistorydialogues.org), which is part of the Global History Lab at the University of Cambridge in the UK. Within this framework, she co-edited the anthology The Right to Research: Historical Narratives by Refugee and Global South Researchers (2023) with Kate Reed.
Marcia Schenck, © Thomas Roest
Birgit Weyhe, © Vera Drebusch, 2025
Elisabeth Nechutnys studied Anglophone Literatures at the University of Potsdam and is one of the founders of Postcolonial Potsdam, an initiative that organizes cultural events and has developed a postcolonial walking tour through Potsdam. She is currently working at the Museum für Naturkunde as part of TheMuseumsLab.
This event is a cooperation with the University of Potsdam.
Lisa Nechutnys, © private