Refine
Year of publication
- 2010 (108)
- 2011 (103)
- 2019 (94)
- 2017 (86)
- 2021 (80)
- 2008 (77)
- 2018 (75)
- 2012 (72)
- 2020 (72)
- 2022 (72)
- 2016 (66)
- 2005 (65)
- 2013 (60)
- 2009 (59)
- 2004 (57)
- 2015 (57)
- 2024 (53)
- 2006 (51)
- 2014 (45)
- 2023 (41)
- 1999 (33)
- 2007 (25)
- 1995 (18)
- 1998 (17)
- 2003 (15)
- 2002 (10)
- 1997 (7)
- 2000 (7)
- 1996 (6)
- 1993 (5)
- 1992 (2)
- 1994 (2)
- 2001 (2)
- 1964 (1)
- 1981 (1)
- 1983 (1)
- 1984 (1)
- 1988 (1)
- 1989 (1)
- 1991 (1)
Document Type
- Journal Article (731)
- Online Publication (478)
- Part of a Book (330)
- Book (8)
- Preprint (8)
Language
- German (1555) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (1555) (remove)
Keywords
- Forschungsfelder (63)
- Begriffe (45)
- Methoden (13)
- Grundlagen (12)
- Länder (12)
- Klassiker (8)
- Prozesse (6)
- Debatten (5)
- Schnittmengen (5)
- Deutschland (4)
When does stress – understood as a bodily and psychological condition connected to rapid social change and the pressure to perform – become a social concern? Previous historical research has situated the topic exclusively in the West: stress as a characteristic condition of what is understood to be Western capitalism. Using the examples of the state socialist GDR and Czechoslovakia in the 1960s – 1980s, this contribution demonstrates how stress became a broad social concern in a non-liberal, noncapitalist context. It thereby challenges the notion that stress is a Western phenomenon, proposing instead to see it in the context of developed and “multiple” modernities.