Günter Benser is a GermanMarxist historian. Before 1989 he was a senior staff member of the Berlin-based :de:Kaufhaus Jonaß|Marxism–Leninism Institute attached to the ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany, and serving as its director for not quite two and a half eventful years, starting on 21 December 1989.
Life
Benser was born into a working-class family in Heidenau, a small manufacturing town which he himself recently described as a "product of the rapid industrialisation of Saxony during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries". While he was growing upamateur dramatics and the "Heidenauer Volksbühne", which his grandfather had co-founded in 1906, played an important part in the Bensers' family life. He embarked on a management traineeship with Elbtalwerke AG, a local manufacturer, and then began to study History at Leipzig University. He was employed in 1952/53 by the district council in Leipzig. Between 1955 and 1989 he was also employed as a researcher, latterly as a deputy head of department, at the party's Berlin based :de:Kaufhaus Jonaß|Marxism–Leninism Institute. He was also a member of the Council for Historical Studies and worked for the National Historians' Committee of the German Democratic Republic. He received his doctorate from the Marxism–Leninism Institute in 1964 for a dissertation on the Strategy and Tactics of the Marxist German workers' political parties between 1945 and 1949. The Marxism–Leninism Institute in Berlin where Benser worked for more than three decades was tightly regulated till 1971, a period during which according to at least one source Walter Ulbricht, the country's leader, appeared to see himself as the nation's top historian. Ulbricht's successor, Erich Honecker, took a less hands-on approach to national history, and researchers at the Institute were able to discuss their subject more openly, even though a principal role of the Institute continued to involve de facto censorship of published history to ensure compliance with party doctrine. In this context, following the breach of the Berlin Wall which took place in November 1989 and the flood of high level resignations that ensued, the Institute found itself leaderless. On 21 December 1989 Günter Benser found himself elected director of the institute by his fellow members, with 298 votes in support, 14 abstentions and one vote against his election, and he duly took over the directorship vacated, after a twenty-year incumbency, by Günter Heyden. Twenty-five years later Benser was still recalling in print his surprise over this turn of events. He retained the directorship until March 1992 when the Institute dissolved itself.
During the forty-year existence of the German Democratic Republic Benser published numerous articles and compilations concerned with the history of the country's ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany and of communism more generally. His pre-1989 works were part of East Germany's standard historiography of itself and effectively followed the established party line. After 1989 he distanced himself from his earlier output, and after 1993 he joined other former doyens of the East German academic and intellectual establishment as a member of the. As well as his writings on politics and party matters, Benser has chronicled the history of the "Heidenauer Volksbühne".