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German Literary Culture at the Zero Hour (Paperback)
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German Literary Culture at the Zero Hour (Paperback)
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Examines the intense intellectual debates in immediate postwar
Germany, often conducted in literature or literary discourse. In
the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, German
intellectuals and writers were forced to confront perhaps the most
difficult complex of problems ever faced by modern intellectuals in
the western world: the complete defeat and devastation of their
country, the crimes of the Hitler dictatorship, the onset of the
Cold War, and ultimately the political division of the nation. To a
large extent these debates took place in literature and literary
discourse, and they continue to have pressing relevance for Germany
today, when the country is rediscovering and exploring this
previously neglected period in literature and film. Yet the period
has been neglected in scholarship, andis little understood; for the
first time in English, this book offers a systematic overview of
the hotly contested intellectual debates of this period: the
problem of German guilt, the question of the return of literary and
political emigres such as Thomas Mann, the relevance of the
cultural tradition of German humanism for the postwar period, the
threat of nihilism, the politicization of literature, and the
status of German young people who had been indoctrinated by the
Nazis. Stephen Brockmann challenges the received wisdom that the
immediate postwar period in Germany was intellectually barren,
characterized primarily by silence on the major issues of the day;
he reveals, in addition to attempts to obfuscate those issues, a
German intellectual--and literary--world characterized by an often
high level of dialogue and debate. Stephen Brockmann is Professor
of German at Carnegie Mellon University. He is the recipient of the
2007 DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) Prize for
Distinguished Scholarship in German and European
Studies/Humanities.
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