TY - JOUR
T1 - Fragile bonds of recognition: Exploring the social underpinnings of sentiments of exclusion in post-1989 East Germany
AU - Hilmar, Till
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© European Journal of Sociology 2022.
PY - 2022/8
Y1 - 2022/8
N2 - Recently, as a corollary of intensified efforts to understand the rise of right-wing populism, the topic of social recognition has gained renewed attention in sociological research. It seems that a sense of misrecognition and exclusion is shaped as much by cultural as by economic factors. Just how these elements are interlinked, however, remains a black box. In this article, I offer an empirical contribution to this problem: I demonstrate that social recognition is nourished in everyday interpersonal relations and that people negotiate ideas of economic deservingness in their social surroundings-so much so, in fact, that they make social ties dependent on them. The article studies the case of the post-1989 societal shifts in formerly communist-ruled East Germany, a context marked by a pervasive sense of social exclusion today. In interviews with 41 individuals who lived through this rupturing process, I identify a crucial dynamic of social misrecognition in how respondents evaluate other peoples' strategies of coping with the economic fallout of this time and how they draw-often deeply personal-boundaries between themselves and others on these grounds.
AB - Recently, as a corollary of intensified efforts to understand the rise of right-wing populism, the topic of social recognition has gained renewed attention in sociological research. It seems that a sense of misrecognition and exclusion is shaped as much by cultural as by economic factors. Just how these elements are interlinked, however, remains a black box. In this article, I offer an empirical contribution to this problem: I demonstrate that social recognition is nourished in everyday interpersonal relations and that people negotiate ideas of economic deservingness in their social surroundings-so much so, in fact, that they make social ties dependent on them. The article studies the case of the post-1989 societal shifts in formerly communist-ruled East Germany, a context marked by a pervasive sense of social exclusion today. In interviews with 41 individuals who lived through this rupturing process, I identify a crucial dynamic of social misrecognition in how respondents evaluate other peoples' strategies of coping with the economic fallout of this time and how they draw-often deeply personal-boundaries between themselves and others on these grounds.
KW - Deservingness
KW - NETWORKS
KW - Post-communist Germany
KW - RELATIVE DEPRIVATION
KW - Social Recognition
KW - Symbolic Boundaries
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85133821021&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0003975622000236
DO - 10.1017/S0003975622000236
M3 - Article
SN - 0003-9756
VL - 63
SP - 247
EP - 278
JO - European Journal of Sociology
JF - European Journal of Sociology
IS - 2
ER -