Museum Media. Группа авторов
as an illustration of Wesner’s testimony.
However, video testimonies and film and photographs can also be used to critically reflect on one another. In its section on German reunification, the Haus der Geschichte shows, among other things, a video testimony from the German political singer Wolf Biermann, who was stripped of his East German citizenship while on tour in West Germany in 1976. Biermann recalls here how people laughed at Helmut Kohl’s metaphor of the “blooming landscapes” that East Germany would be turned into. “That fat Kohl was proved right,” he comments; “it took a bit longer, it cost a bit more ... So what, that’s good. I am glad that we have this problem rather than another.” The other witnesses to history that are shown – all of them politicians – agree with Biermann in their positive evaluation of German unification. Right next to the video testimony, the museum shows the cycle of photographs Unterwegs im Beitrittsgebiet (En route through the accession region) that the West German photographer Michael Rutschky took during several journeys into East Germany between 1989 and 1993. The photographs show anything but blooming landscapes: factories, desolate houses, desperate graffiti, poverty, and the process of renovation. The testimony and the photographs here have an illustrative, but also a corrective effect on each other. The photographs suggest that it took – and still takes – time to turn East Germany into an economically blooming landscape. The video testimony relativizes the rather negative impression given by the photographs.
The examples that I have given here are, of course, not exhaustive. Each exhibition using video testimonies is different, and so are the epistemological associations that are made with other museum objects. What the examples show, however, is how video testimonies are used as representatives of the past in their own right as well as critical or affirmative comments on other exhibits. Video testimonies are used to place objects within a framework of lived history that illustrates what the object is supposed to represent. The juxtaposition of video testimonies and other museum exhibits can thereby serve a function of mutual authentication. It can also invite critical evaluation. Both uses, as the example of the exhibition section on the beat generation in the Haus der Geschichte shows, are not necessarily mutually exclusive. Video testimonies can be used to illustrate and authenticate, and at the same time to relativize.
I observed earlier that video testimonies can serve as design elements. Video testimonies are still most prominently used in Holocaust and World War II museums. In many Holocaust and World War II museums, an “aesthetic of horror” has been adopted, with the use of dark colors and large bare spaces – often made of concrete. The dark, monochromatic background that is chosen, and the gray or black stelae that the screens are built into, underline these aesthetics. For example in the Museo Diffuso, located in the cellar of an eighteenth-century palazzo, the stelae almost disappear in the darkened space. How much this gloomy atmosphere has become the standard and how much the aesthetics of video testimonies can serve to underline them becomes apparent when looking at counterexamples. In the Neuengamme Memorial, a former concentration camp memorial in northern Germany, the curators have decided against the aesthetic of horror.5 Consequently, the walls in the old stone barracks in which the exhibitions are located are white and the rooms bright. The video testimonies, many of which were recorded in the 1990s, at a time when a standard aesthetic for video testimonies had not yet been developed, show the witnesses to history in a homely environment such as their living room. The video testimonies therefore underline the comparatively inviting aesthetic of the Neuengamme Memorial. Moreover, while the elaborate video testimonies in museums like the Museo Diffuso tend to make the witnesses to history appear as part of a series, the less sophisticated videos showing them in their home environment further help to present witnesses to history as individuals with a specific history living in a very specific memorial context.6
Video testimonies as didactic means
Because of their perceived authenticity and the fact that they combine visual elements with textual elements, video testimonies serve as particularly potent didactic means. The witnesses’ testimonies have a bearing on the narrative of the exhibition – or even carry this narrative completely, as in the case of the Museo Diffuso. Through their selection of the particular video testimonies from the collection, and of the extracts from those videos, to include in the exhibition, curators can – and do – structure and model the narrative of the video testimonies and the messages that are transmitted to visitors. Generally speaking, there are three basic messages: video testimonies are used to transmit historical knowledge to visitors, to give them moral lessons, and to affect them. Using the Haus der Geschichte as an example, I will analyze the use of video testimonies as didactic means.
First, since witnesses to history have been physically and temporally part of the events that they testify to, their testimonies are used to transmit historical knowledge to visitors. This is especially the case when alternative documentation is missing. In particular, video testimonies of Holocaust survivors are used to testify to the prisoners’ life in the camps, as alternative documents are often missing. However, the teaching of history with the help of video testimonies does not stop here. Through the selection of extracts and the way in which those extracts are arranged, curators also guide visitors’ interpretation of historical information. In particular, the last sentences, those that conclude the video testimony, are meticulously chosen. Thus, in the Haus der Geschichte, Carola Stern, who in 1945 was a leader in the League of German Girls and later a journalist, remembers that, when they were told by some soldiers that “the Führer has fallen in the battle of the Reich Chancellery,” her mother burst into tears and her cousin cried: “Now there is no sense in life anymore.” She, however, told them: “Are you crazy? Do you believe what he is saying? That man has taken his own life. He has left us alone in the dirt and escaped. That’s the truth!” It does not matter whether Carola Stern really grasped the situation this well at the time – it seems unlikely, since she was a young girl who obviously believed in the National Socialist project and was surrounded by people who did. What is important is that, with her testimony, Carola Stern both forecloses a heroic interpretation of Hitler’s death and interprets her mother’s and cousin’s behavior as irrational and futile.
In another video the American soldier La Verne Keats relates that, when he first heard about Dachau, he could hardly believe “that a people like the Germans with all of their education, would permit something like this to happen.” In order to understand, he and his fellow soldiers started questioning the prisoners. He concludes his testimony with the sentence: “I could hardly sympathize with the German soldiers anymore because with their fighting they had supported this regime.” La Verne Keats’s testimony corrects the image of the clean Wehrmacht which has for a long time been prominent in Germany. This image was finally challenged in the 1990s by the exhibition Vernichungskrieg: Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941–1944 (War of annihilation: Crimes of the Wehrmacht 1941–1944). The exhibition toured 33 German and Austrian cities between 1995 and 1999 and can be seen as a turning point in German memorial culture. The exhibition, which documented crimes committed by ordinary Wehrmacht soldiers, shattered the ideas that many Germans had about their fathers and grandfathers. It met with protests and vandalism from right-wing extremists and became a subject of political debate in every city where it was shown. In 1999 the exhibition eventually had to close down, because of criticism relating to an incorrect attribution of photographs. A revised version opened again in 2001 under the title Verbrechen der Wehrmacht: Dimensionen des Vernichtungskrieges 1941–1944 (Crimes of the Wehrmacht: Dimensions of the war of annihilation 1941–1944; see Williams 2007, 59; Musial 2011). La Verne Keats’s testimony can be seen as an extension to, and final word on, the debate on the exhibition: he accuses not only those soldiers who actively took part in the crimes, but all soldiers who, in their fighting, all supported a criminal regime.
In a video testimony on the construction of the Berlin Wall, Dorothee Wilms defends then chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s much criticized decision not to travel to Berlin. She observes that she understands Adenauer’s decision, that he could not have done much, that Berlin was still occupied territory, and that this was a question that had to be resolved by the four victorious powers. Moreover, the situation was so heated that a war seemed imminent. Visitors are, therefore, not only given the information that Hitler committed suicide, that the camps were liberated by the Allies,