{"id":336,"date":"2015-09-10T11:22:31","date_gmt":"2015-09-10T15:22:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/?page_id=336"},"modified":"2023-05-23T23:58:24","modified_gmt":"2023-05-24T03:58:24","slug":"panel-grown-up-children","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/events\/panel-grown-up-children\/","title":{"rendered":"Panel Grown-up Children"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"wpb-content-wrapper\"><p>[vc_row row_type=&#8221;row&#8221; use_row_as_full_screen_section=&#8221;no&#8221; type=&#8221;full_width&#8221; header_style=&#8221;&#8221; parallax_content_width=&#8221;in_grid&#8221; anchor=&#8221;&#8221; in_content_menu=&#8221;&#8221; content_menu_title=&#8221;&#8221; content_menu_icon=&#8221;&#8221; angled_section=&#8221;no&#8221; angled_section_position=&#8221;both&#8221; angled_section_direction=&#8221;from_left_to_right&#8221; text_align=&#8221;left&#8221; video=&#8221;&#8221; video_overlay=&#8221;&#8221; video_overlay_image=&#8221;&#8221; video_webm=&#8221;&#8221; video_mp4=&#8221;&#8221; video_ogv=&#8221;&#8221; video_image=&#8221;&#8221; background_image=&#8221;&#8221; background_image_as_pattern=&#8221;without_pattern&#8221; section_height=&#8221;&#8221; parallax_speed=&#8221;&#8221; background_color=&#8221;&#8221; border_color=&#8221;&#8221; row_negative_margin=&#8221;&#8221; side_padding=&#8221;&#8221; parallax_side_padding=&#8221;&#8221; padding_top=&#8221;&#8221; padding_bottom=&#8221;&#8221; color=&#8221;&#8221; hover_color=&#8221;&#8221; more_button_label=&#8221;&#8221; less_button_label=&#8221;&#8221; button_position=&#8221;&#8221; transition_delay=&#8221;&#8221;][vc_column][vc_column_text]<\/p>\n<h4>Panel:<strong>\u00a0\u201cGrown-Up Children from State Socialist Regimes\u201d<\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Moderator: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.languages.uconn.edu\/faculty\/details.php?id=5\">Jacqueline Loss<\/a> (Literary Critic)<\/p>\n<p>Panelists: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.travelandleisure.com\/blogs\/authors\/anya-von-bremzen\">Anya von Bremzen<\/a>\u00a0(Food Writer), <a href=\"http:\/\/complit.as.nyu.edu\/object\/anadopico.html\">Ana Mar\u00eda Dopico<\/a>\u00a0(Literary Critic), <a href=\"http:\/\/www.newschool.edu\/facultyexperts\/faculty.aspx?id=82156\">Elzbieta Matynia<\/a>\u00a0(Sociologist), <a href=\"http:\/\/www.newschool.edu\/nssr\/faculty\/?id=4e44-4179-4e7a-4d3d\">Virag Molnar<\/a> (Sociologist), <a href=\"https:\/\/livadia.wordpress.com\/\">Jos\u00e9 Manuel Prieto<\/a> (Writer), <a href=\"https:\/\/nyu.academia.edu\/AbelSierraMadero\">Abel Sierra Madero<\/a> (Historian)<\/p>\n<p><em>Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Auditorium (Room N101), Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, 66 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003.<\/em><\/p>\n<h4>Event Summary:<\/h4>\n<p>Literary critic Jacqueline Loss moderated a thought-provoking conversation with a panel of professionals. The panel, titled &#8220;Grown-Up Children from State Socialist Regimes,&#8221; offered attendees a unique perspective on the experiences and memories of individuals who grew up in state socialist regimes or were influenced by their inherited memories.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_403\" style=\"width: 730px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/files\/2015\/09\/panel-grown-up-children.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-403\" class=\"size-full wp-image-403\" src=\"https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/files\/2015\/09\/panel-grown-up-children.jpg\" alt=\"Image courtesy of Yesenia Fern\u00e1ndez Selier\" width=\"720\" height=\"405\" srcset=\"https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/files\/2015\/09\/panel-grown-up-children.jpg 720w, https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/files\/2015\/09\/panel-grown-up-children-300x169.jpg 300w, https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/files\/2015\/09\/panel-grown-up-children-700x394.jpg 700w, https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/files\/2015\/09\/panel-grown-up-children-539x303.jpg 539w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 720px) 100vw, 720px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-403\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Image courtesy of Yesenia Fern\u00e1ndez Selier<\/p><\/div>\n<blockquote>\n<div class=\"flex-1 overflow-hidden\">\n<div class=\"react-scroll-to-bottom--css-xcqtg-79elbk h-full dark:bg-gray-800\">\n<div class=\"react-scroll-to-bottom--css-xcqtg-1n7m0yu\">\n<div class=\"flex flex-col text-sm dark:bg-gray-800\">\n<div class=\"group w-full text-gray-800 dark:text-gray-100 border-b border-black\/10 dark:border-gray-900\/50 bg-gray-50 dark:bg-[#444654]\">\n<div class=\"flex p-4 gap-4 text-base md:gap-6 md:max-w-2xl lg:max-w-xl xl:max-w-3xl md:py-6 lg:px-0 m-auto\">\n<div class=\"relative flex w-[calc(100%-50px)] flex-col gap-1 md:gap-3 lg:w-[calc(100%-115px)]\">\n<div class=\"flex flex-grow flex-col gap-3\">\n<div class=\"min-h-[20px] flex flex-col items-start gap-4 whitespace-pre-wrap break-words\">\n<div class=\"markdown prose w-full break-words dark:prose-invert light\">\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Loss: What it was like to grow up in a state socialist regime, or, in the case of those who emigrated with their families quite young, their inherited memories?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Von Bremzen, who was born in the Soviet Union and emigrated to the US when she was ten, talks of the fundamental nostalgia that accompanies any reflection on one\u2019s past childhood. She explains that this nostalgia takes the form of <em>ostalgia<\/em> in the post-socialist world\u2014 nostalgia for the Ost (east) and the things and experiences associated with it.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Sierra Madero refers to the overall politicization of childhood, to the state\u2019s intervention in the private sphere\u2014an intrusion he says is well represented in the slogan \u201cSomos felices aqui\u201d (we are happy here), which manipulated a child\u2019s affects to instill patriotic values, turning happiness into a moral obligation. Sierra Madero also talks of children bullying others with religious beliefs, mentioning a schoolmate who was a Jehovah Witness and was bullied for his religious practice with the teachers\u2019 consent. He says that this was one of the first glimpses he had of the unfair nature of state socialist society.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Sierra Madero also talks of children participating in <em>actos de repudio<\/em> (repudiation acts) against people who asked for a permit to leave the country; of children concealing opinions that were differed from the official narrative promoted by the regime; and of how the state apparatus of indoctrination robbed children\u2019s innocence, initiating them in a world of falsehood and double standards.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Matynia recalls the moment when she realized that her parents were listening to a forbidden Western radio station in her native Poland. They told her not mention it at school or anywhere else, fearing the consequences, and Moln\u00e1r mentions having watched German or Austrian channels due to the proximity of her Hungarian city to the western border. The children did not notice the real dimensions and impact of the socialist experiment. Her own childhood was \u201cnormal,\u201d she says, children\u2019s notions of what is normal and what is not dependent on their reality. Despite having grown up in a \u201cnew socialist town,\u201d she explains, surrounded by mass prefabricated housing projects, that she felt it as normal, unaware of other realities, architectural styles, and spaces. She never thought, she adds, about how uncommon the material environment in which she grew up was.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Prieto notes that, because of state socialist policies and the government\u2019s permanent intervention in the private sphere, in state socialist societies, childhood has extended well into adulthood. \u201cEverybody is a child\u201d in these societies, he says. He also refers to the contradiction between the youth, educated under new values, and their parents, who identify with the capitalist behaviors of the past, as he experienced in his native Cuba.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Dopico, whose parents took her to Miami at the age of three, talks of her infancy, which she describes as being characterized by a mix of feelings due to her parents\u2019 exile condition. On the one hand, she explains that she experienced a feeling of relief for escaping Cuba and the \u201ccommunist\u201d regime. On the other hand, she developed anxiety associated with her awareness of having been \u201csaved\u201d from \u201csomething,\u201d which she could not completely understand. She associates her ambivalent feelings with many of the behaviors and values she learned to have been shaped under the influence of Cuba\u2019s scarcity. Growing up in Miami was, Dopico says, an experience that inversely mirrored the real and imagined experience of growing up in \u201ccommunist\u201d Cuba.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Loss asks about the emotional impact of the exhibition.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Sierra Madero, it did so by putting him face-to-face with long-forgotten rituals of the Cuban school system, such as the way in which the date was written on the blackboard (two lines in the top right corner, one for the date, and the other for the name the government gave to the year), a format reproduced in each classroom in the country.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Von Bremzen, on the contrary, does not directly identify with the objects exhibited, which had a Western appearance to her. She did not find many commonalities between the material culture of her childhood in the Soviet Union and the objects exhibited in the show.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Moln\u00e1r and Matynia discuss some similarities. Matynia mentions the school uniforms, which looked the same all over the Bloc, adding that, even though there was a similar pattern in the way childhood was constructed by state socialist regimes, there were also differences among the Soviet Bloc countries.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Prieto notes how the exhibition highlighted the scarcity and poverty that characterized the state socialist material culture, of which even the objects associated with childhood were a testament.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For Moln\u00e1r, the exhibition also shows the efforts of state socialist regimes to portray and construct a socialist normalcy.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For Dopico, it shows part of the \u201cother\u201d world from which her parents tried to protect her. She remembers her childhood as partially built as a mirroring image of her cousins, who lived in Cuba. She recalls being always compared with her cousins in Cuba, being told anytime she did not want to eat or wear something, that her cousins in Cuba could not have it and were craving for it. These comparisons, Dopico says, made her feel morally obliged to eat\/use\/enjoy the things her parents gave her and to attempt to be \u201cperfect,\u201d as any Cuban child unspoiled by communism should be.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Loss asks how panelists conceived of the world and the foreign realm as children. She mentions that in Cuba children were encouraged to become pen pals with children from other countries of the Bloc and asks if any of them \u201chappened to have had pen pals, and how that\u2014along with other forms of informal and formal education\u2014may have shaped the prism through which they viewed or currently view what was\/is foreign.\u201d Noting that for some panelists \u201cforeign\u201d might mean not really the rest of the socialist world but the capitalist one, Loss invites the panelists to talk about \u201cwhat they knew about the rest of the world and about socialist solidarity in particular.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Prieto says that, despite his parents\u2019 middle-class status, he grew up with a feeling of \u201cfear\u201d of the West, being \u201cafraid\u201d of the allure of Western things, and that, as a young adult, when he travelled to the USSR, he had to overcome that terror, which overwhelmed him on a stopover in a Western European city.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Matynia reflects on the efforts and resources that state socialist regimes put into place to standardize childhood all over the Soviet Bloc, to represent the unity of goals and interests of the socialist community of nations. As an example, she mentions Crimea, an elitist vacationing hub where the most exemplary children from different countries of the Bloc were awarded vacations. According to her, this was a form of not only reward for their academic achievements but also education, which instilled in them the same set of behaviors and values.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Moln\u00e1r adds that variations and differences determined by the geography and culture of the countries of the Bloc also affected the daily lives of children. She mentions that Hungarians knew of their privileged access to two passports: a red one to travel to the countries of the Bloc, and a \u201cregular,\u201d more expensive one, to travel to the West.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Von Bremzen mentions Cuba\u2019s exoticism, also recalling that her circle of friends grew tired of the USSR providing economic assistance to Cuba at the expense of the USSR\u2019s wellbeing. As they believed that scarce goods were exported to Cuba in exchange for sugar, she and her friends wished to send the sugar back to Cuba to have enough wheat to make their own bread. They imagined themselves saying to Cubans \u201ctake back your sugar and return our wheat.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Dopico defines her Miamian childhood as being isolated. Her parents took care not to expose her to things associated with the Cuban regime, even though they were very fond of Cuban culture in general, which they transmitted to her. She says that she grew up knowing that it would be a betrayal to her parents and the Cuban American community to be interested in things associated with the Cuban regime.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In the last part of the panel, Loss asks the participants individual questions.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Anya von Bremzen: As you may know, one of the most influential writers of this generation, Antonio Jos\u00e9 Ponte, published a book in 1997 toward the end of the Special Period in Cuba, called <em>Comidas profundas<\/em>. On it, Ponte reflects upon personal memories and literary references to food in a moment of general scarcity and hunger. You have used the term \u2018poisoned madeleine\u2019 in your work to convey the idiosyncrasies of food in a state socialist regime. Could you discuss this term and how growing up in a socialist regime evokes a particular form of nostalgia? Can you also refer to how your initial contact with the American presentation of food has changed your ideas about the foreign?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For Von Bremzen, having nostalgia for a regime that was basically negative is a cynical feeling, yet something you cannot avoid all the time. She talks of penuries and the tactics she and her friends developed to escape them, describing how she became a black marketer at a very young age, when she split a piece of chewing gum into several small parts to sell at school.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Ana Dopico: I have read and reread a recent stunning piece you wrote entitled \u201cCuban Pictures and Political Love,\u201d where you reflect upon \u201ca toddler, dressed in an Asturian costume, holding a doll in an identical dress, and a slender young woman who holds her tightly by hand. They stand on a median in Havana, next to the Malec\u00f3n.\u201d Several paragraphs later become clear that the young girl was you. You make very evident that your family remained connected to Cuba through personal correspondence and news\u2014so, as a child or adolescent, did you ever feel as if you missed out? Today, you talked about reciting poems, especially Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed\u2019s <em>La edad de oro<\/em>, in Little Havana. Was it good enough compensation? How did that feel, and how was it explained to you?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Dopico shows a photo book her parents gave her when she was taking ballet classes. It was about Alicia Alonso, a famous Cuban ballerina. Some pages had been ripped out, and Dopico grew up wanting to know what could have been there, only to eventually discover that they contained pictures of Alonso with Fidel Castro. This \u201cdistillation\u201d of the Cuban culture effected by the exile experience, she says, made Cuban\u2013American children grow up under the feeling that they were part of a \u201cstolen generation,\u201d that something had been stolen from them. This was particularly strong if individuals happened to lean toward the left, like Dopico\u2019s mother. Criticizing US national politics was OK to her mother, yet identifying with Cuba\u2019s position was an anathema, even if it was sometimes difficult to tell the difference, and that made her feel a schism of sorts between private and public life in the Miami of her childhood.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Elzbieta Matynia: Considering your work on post-communist transitions to democracy, to what extent does the memorialization of the material and cultural aspects of the socialist past have any bearing on the actual transition and life in post-communist societies? Do you feel that these recollections rapidly fade into the past with the last generation who lived there and hardly affected the present day? What is the value of remembering?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Matynia explains that people do not want to depart from things that have been part of their lives, and are generally aware of how difficult it is to learn how to use things. She discusses the emergence of nostalgia for the socialist past within former Soviet Bloc countries, suggesting its inevitability as well as its contradictions and healing potential.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Virag Moln\u00e1r: Would you be able to extend your analysis on the relationship between architecture and state politics in postwar Central Europe and how architecture was mobilized within socialist modernization to the world of industrial design and domestic space? In Cuba, there are many prejudices regarding Soviet products, while it is also acknowledged that, while they may have looked aesthetically drab back then, they endured the test of time. From your experience and\/or research, how was industrial design and domestic space also part of that mobilization toward modernization?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Following Matynia\u2019s comment, Molnar defined <em>ostalgia<\/em> as a coping strategy, a tactic of post-socialist citizens to ease the troubles of present life.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Jos\u00e9 M. Prieto: Your fiction is deeply immersed in the intersections of distinct notions and contact with pleasure\u2014from the sensuality of a word and its intertextuality to contact with a human body or the pleasure of consumption. In 1996, in the story \u201cNunca antes hab\u00edas visto el rojo\u201d and in an essay you published around that year, you commented on what frivolity meant for the Soviets and how the Soviet empire in fact collapsed in your eyes out of people\u2019s longing for the frivolity of the West. Almost 20 years later, how do you approach the representation of frivolity within this exhibition and in what ways do you see it as an important category to continue reflecting upon to understand the present of Cuba?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Prieto states that the fact that his characters are guided by a search for pleasure originates in a sensorial hunger that developed during his infancy. At that time, he says, Western goods became something close to fetishes, recalling the awe he felt when he saw for the first time all the things that were available in Cuba\u2019s capitalist city.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">To Abel Sierra Madero: In your work, you have reflected upon the gap between the Soviet past and contemporary thinking about it. To my understanding, you suggest that one of the dangers in doing so is that we might be unable to recognize the ways in which some aspects of the past are indeed part and parcel of some of the most repressive mechanisms of control in the Cuban society of the present. Could you talk to us about the tensions between memorialization and critique?<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">There was no time left for him to respond. Two members of the public asked about the strategies through which nostalgia is managed in the present and the representation of class differences in socialism.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Then, the mics were turned off, and everybody enjoyed Cuban sandwiches, Russian chocolates, and Californian wine.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>[\/vc_column_text][\/vc_column][\/vc_row]<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[vc_row row_type=&#8221;row&#8221; use_row_as_full_screen_section=&#8221;no&#8221; type=&#8221;full_width&#8221; header_style=&#8221;&#8221; parallax_content_width=&#8221;in_grid&#8221; anchor=&#8221;&#8221; in_content_menu=&#8221;&#8221; content_menu_title=&#8221;&#8221; content_menu_icon=&#8221;&#8221; angled_section=&#8221;no&#8221; angled_section_position=&#8221;both&#8221; angled_section_direction=&#8221;from_left_to_right&#8221; text_align=&#8221;left&#8221; video=&#8221;&#8221; video_overlay=&#8221;&#8221; video_overlay_image=&#8221;&#8221; video_webm=&#8221;&#8221; video_mp4=&#8221;&#8221; video_ogv=&#8221;&#8221; video_image=&#8221;&#8221; background_image=&#8221;&#8221; background_image_as_pattern=&#8221;without_pattern&#8221; section_height=&#8221;&#8221; parallax_speed=&#8221;&#8221; background_color=&#8221;&#8221; border_color=&#8221;&#8221; row_negative_margin=&#8221;&#8221; side_padding=&#8221;&#8221; parallax_side_padding=&#8221;&#8221; padding_top=&#8221;&#8221; padding_bottom=&#8221;&#8221; color=&#8221;&#8221; hover_color=&#8221;&#8221; more_button_label=&#8221;&#8221; less_button_label=&#8221;&#8221; button_position=&#8221;&#8221; transition_delay=&#8221;&#8221;][vc_column][vc_column_text] Panel:\u00a0\u201cGrown-Up Children from State Socialist Regimes\u201d Moderator:&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"parent":153,"menu_order":1,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-336","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.7 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Panel Grown-up Children - Pioneros<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/cubamaterial.com\/pioneros\/events\/panel-grown-up-children\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Panel Grown-up Children - Pioneros\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"[vc_row row_type=&#8221;row&#8221; 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