Society–Knowledge–Discourse
Project Description
DFG-funded Research Project
In the Shadow of Scientism
It is well known that in the GDR, against the backdrop of the scientific-scientific worldview propagated by the state, all ‘paranormal’ topics in the broadest sense were considered ‘dark superstition’ and were systematically discredited in public discourse. However, beyond the public discrediting of these topics, virtually nothing was known about their significance in GDR society. Specifically asked:
What did GDR citizens think about topics such as thought transference, dreams, premonitions, poltergeist phenomena- and ghost experiences, parapsychology, astrology, alternative medicine or UFOs?
Regardless of the public announcements, were the population’s preoccupation with the relevant content and the associated practices actually suppressed or did they at least continue to exist in secret?
These questions formed the background of the historical-sociological research project In the shadow of scientism. Dealing with heterodox knowledge, experiences and forms of practice in the GDR, that ran from September 2013 to the end of 2017 and was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). The project investigated the relationship between orthodox and heterodox bodies of knowledge and forms of practice in the GDR using the example of the subject of the ‘paranormal’ with a focus on the sociology of knowledge and had three main objectives:
Institutional Action and Social Control:
The clear thrust of the GDR’s public discourse on the ‘paranormal’ was accompanied by an institutionally supported defensive struggle against the propagated dangers of superstition, which was realized with considerable effort, especially in the early days of the GDR, and manifested itself in the form of legal prohibitions, censorship, control and sometimes drastic persecution and punitive measures.
The paranormal in the GDR world:
From the mid-1960s at the latest, paranormal themes, practices and stocks of knowledge existed in the GDR population only in very small numbers and in a highly concealed form. The paranormal in the GDR can therefore be seen as an example of a successfully marginalized heterodoxy, which in the end had virtually no social or cultural relevance. This can be seen as a direct consequence of the discursive and institutional measures taken by the GDR state leadership against the ‘paranormal’, whereby other possible influencing factors such as the strong secularization tendency of East German regions, which goes back further in history, must also be taken into account.
About the book

Das Paranormale im Sozialismus
Author: Andreas Anton
Publisher: Logos Verlag Berlin
Language: German
Geb. Ausgabe: 327 pages
ISBN: 978-3-8325-4773-8