𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Recasting German Identity: Culture, Politics, and Literature in the Berlin Republic (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture)

✍ Scribed by Stuart Taberner, Frank Finlay


Year
2002
Tongue
English
Leaves
286
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


This collection of fifteen essays by scholars from the UK, the US, Germany, and Scandinavia revisits the question of German identity. Unlike previous books on this topic, however, the focus is not exclusively on national identity in the aftermath of Hitler. Instead, the concentration is upon the plurality of ethnic, sexual, political, geographical, and cultural identities in modern Germany, and on their often fragmentary nature as the country struggles with the challenges of unification and international developments such as globalization, multiculturalism, and postmodernism. The multifaceted nature of German identity demands a variety of approaches: thus the essays are interdisciplinary, drawing upon historical, sociological, and literary sources. They are organized with reference to three distinct sections: Berlin, Political Formations, and Difference; yet at the same time they illuminate one another across the volume, offering a nuanced understanding of the complex question of identity in today's Germany. Topics include the new self-understanding of the Berlin Republic, Berlin as a public showcase, the Berlin architecture debate, the Walser-Bubis debate, fictions of German history and the end of the GDR, the impact of the German student movement on the FRG, Prime Minister Biedenkopf and the myth of Saxon identity, women in post-1989 Germany, trains as symbols and the function of the foreign in post-1989 fiction, identity construction among Turks in Germany and Turkish self-representation in post-1989 fiction, the state of German literature today. Contributors: Frank Brunssen, Ulrike Zitzlsperger Janet Stewart, Kathrin Sch?del, Karen Leeder, Ingo Cornils, Peter Thompson, Chris Szejnmann, Sabine Lang, Simon Ward, Roswitha Skare, Eva Kolinsky, Margaret Littler, Katharina Gerstenberger, and Stuart Parkes.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Politics and Culture in Twentieth-Centur
✍ William Niven, James Jordan πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2003 🌐 English

The cultural history of 20th-century Germany, more perhaps than that of any other European country, was decisively influenced by political forces and developments. This volume of essays focuses on the relationship between German politics and culture, which is most obvious in the case of the Third R

Germans as Victims in the Literary Ficti
✍ Stuart Taberner, Karina Berger πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2009 πŸ› Camden House 🌐 English

In recent years it has become much more accepted in Germany to consider aspects of the Second World War in which Germans were not perpetrators, but victims: the Allied bombing campaign, expulsions of "ethnic" Germans, mass rapes of German women, and postwar internment and persecution. An explosion o

Music and Literature in German Romantici
✍ Siobhan Donovan, Robin Elliott πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2004 πŸ› Camden House 🌐 English

The interrelationship between music and literature reached its zenith during the Romantic era, and nowhere was this relationship more pronounced than in Germany. Many representatives of literary and philosophical German Romanticism held music to be the highest and most expressive, quintessentially R

Imagining Germany Imagining Asia: Essays
✍ Veronika Fuechtner (editor), Mary Rhiel (editor) πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2013 πŸ› BOYE6 🌐 English

<span>This collection of new essays explores how Germany's imagined Asia informed its national fantasies at crucial historical junctures. It will influence future scholarly explorations of Asian-German cultural transfer.<br><br><br><br>The first collection of essays in the new field of Asian-German