TY - JOUR AB - By the example of former COMECON pipeline builders from the GDR, Jeanette Prochnow exa­mines the impact of generational belonging on community and network building under the conditions of social change in post-1989 Germany. Since the 1990s a vivid culture of companionship and remembrance has developed among former pipeline workers. It is kept alive by associa­tions and interest groups claiming to represent the interests of people who were employed with the state-run pipeline project either in 1974-1978 or 1982-1993. Yet, employees of the first construction phase re­main noticeably underrepresented in the community. In an attempt to explore this generational segregation, concepts of the Ethnography of Communication are combined with a network analytical perspective and Karl Mannheim’s sociology of generation. The paper is guided by the hypothesis that the »speech community« of former pipeline builders cor­responds to a »generational unit« to which employees from the 1970s do not belong because of varying performances responding to events in the socio-historical context. DA - 2010 DO - 10.4119/indi-937 LA - eng IS - 2 M2 - 145 PY - 2010 SN - 2191-6721 SP - 145-183 T2 - InterDisciplines Journal of History and Sociology TI - ‘But we realized that we didn’t fit in there’ – The impact of generational belonging on community building and network formation in post unification Germany UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0070-pub-19978687 Y2 - 2024-11-22T00:05:13 ER -