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This volume extends the theoretical scope of the important concept
of empathy by analysing not only the cultural contexts that foster
the generating of empathy, but in focusing also on the limits of
pro-social feelings and the mechanisms that lead to its blocking.
Interdisciplinary views of the debates over and transformation of
German cultural identity since unification. The events of 1989 and
German unification were seismic historical moments. Although 1989
appeared to signify a healing of the war-torn history of the
twentieth century, unification posed the question of German
cultural identity afresh. Politicians, historians, writers,
filmmakers, architects, and the wider public engaged in "memory
contests" over such questions as the legitimacy of alternative
biographies, West German hegemony, and the normalization of German
history. This dynamic, contested, and still ongoing transformation
of German cultural identity is the topic of this volume of new
essays by scholars from the United Kingdom, Germany, the United
States, and Ireland. It exploresGerman cultural identity by way of
a range of disciplines including history, film studies,
architectural history, literary criticism, memory studies, and
anthropology, avoiding a homogenized interpretation. Charting the
complex and often contradictory processes of cultural identity
formation, the volume reveals the varied responses that continue to
accompany the project of unification. Contributors: Pertti Ahonen,
Aleida Assmann, Elizabeth Boa,Peter Fritzsche, Anne Fuchs, Deniz
Goekturk, Kathleen James-Chakraborty, Anja K. Johannsen, Jennifer
A. Jordan, Jurgen Paul, Linda Shortt, Andrew J. Webber. Anne Fuchs
is Professor of German Literature at the University of St.Andrews,
Scotland. Kathleen James-Chakraborty is Professor of Art History at
University College Dublin, Ireland. Linda Shortt is Lecturer in
German at Bangor University, Wales.
We have left the twentieth century, but this century of violence
and extremes has not left us: Its shadow has become longer and
blacker. Seventy years after the end of the Second World War, the
memory of the Holocaust is less and less anchored in the lived
experience of survivors and witnesses. Shadows of Trauma analyzes
the transformation of the past from an individual experience to a
collective construction, with special attention to the tensions
that arise when personal experience collides with official
commemoration. In addition to surveying memory’s important terms
and distinctions, Assmann traces the process that emerged after the
fall of the Berlin Wall, of creating a new German memory of the
Holocaust. Assmann revisits the pitfalls of “false memory” and
lingering forms of denial and repression, as well as the new
twenty-first-century discourses, such as that of German
“victimhood,” as well as the new memory sites for a future in
which German memory will be increasingly oriented toward a European
context. Combining theoretical analysis with historical case
studies, the book revisits crucial debates and controversial issues
out of which “memory culture” has emerged as a collective
project and a work in progress.
We have left the twentieth century, but this century of violence
and extremes has not left us: Its shadow has become longer and
blacker. Seventy years after the end of the Second World War, the
memory of the Holocaust is less and less anchored in the lived
experience of survivors and witnesses. Shadows of Trauma analyzes
the transformation of the past from an individual experience to a
collective construction, with special attention to the tensions
that arise when personal experience collides with official
commemoration. In addition to surveying memory's important terms
and distinctions, Assmann traces the process that emerged after the
fall of the Berlin Wall, of creating a new German memory of the
Holocaust. Assmann revisits the pitfalls of "false memory" and
lingering forms of denial and repression, as well as the new
twenty-first-century discourses, such as that of German
"victimhood," as well as the new memory sites for a future in which
German memory will be increasingly oriented toward a European
context. Combining theoretical analysis with historical case
studies, the book revisits crucial debates and controversial issues
out of which "memory culture" has emerged as a collective project
and a work in progress.
Cultures invest great efforts into creating a long-term memory on
the basis of oral transmission, media technology, and institutional
frameworks. This book provides an introduction to the concept of
cultural memory, focusing on the arts of its construction,
particularly various media such as writing, images, bodily
practices, places, and monuments. Examining the period from the
European Renaissance to the present, Aleida Assmann reveals the
close association between cultural memory and the arts, arguing
that the artists who have supplemented, criticized, transformed,
and opposed it are its most lucid theorists and acute observers.
Her analysis also addresses the interaction of cultural memory with
individual memory and the ways in which cultural memory supports or
subverts social and political identity constructions. Ultimately,
this book offers a comprehensive overview of the history, forms,
and functions of cultural memory, which has become a central
analytical tool for scholars across disciplines."
Is, as Hamlet once complained, time out joint? Have the ways we
understand the past and the future—and their relationship to the
present—been reordered? The past, it seems, has returned with a
vengeance: as aggressive nostalgia, as traumatic memory, or as
atavistic origin narratives rooted in nation, race, or tribe. The
future, meanwhile, has lost its utopian glamor, with the belief in
progress and hope for a better future eroded by fears of ecological
collapse. In this provocative book, Aleida Assmann argues that the
apparently solid moorings of our temporal orientation have
collapsed within the span of a generation. To understand this
profound cultural crisis, she reconstructs the rise and fall of
what she calls "time regime of modernity" that underpins notions of
modernization and progress, a shared understanding that is now
under threat. Is Time Out of Joint? assesses the deep change in the
temporality of modern Western culture as it relates to our
historical experience, historical theory, and our life-world of
shared experience, explaining what we have both gained and lost
during this profound transformation.
Cultures invest great efforts into creating a long-term memory on
the basis of oral transmission, media technology, and institutional
frameworks. This book provides an introduction to the concept of
cultural memory, focusing on the arts of its construction,
particularly various media such as writing, images, bodily
practices, places, and monuments. Examining the period from the
European Renaissance to the present, Aleida Assmann reveals the
close association between cultural memory and the arts, arguing
that the artists who have supplemented, criticized, transformed,
and opposed it are its most lucid theorists and acute observers.
Her analysis also addresses the interaction of cultural memory with
individual memory and the ways in which cultural memory supports or
subverts social and political identity constructions. Ultimately,
this book offers a comprehensive overview of the history, forms,
and functions of cultural memory, which has become a central
analytical tool for scholars across disciplines.
In Paris Calligrammes the filmmaker, photographer and collector of
worlds Ulrike Ottinger links historical archival material with her
own art and film works to create a sociogram of the era in which
she came of age as an artist. In the grip of political upheavals,
Paris of the 1960s attracted artists from all over the world and
was a pulsating stream of energy hovering between trauma management
and the utopia of Europe. From the Librairie Calligrammes, a
meeting place of exiled German intellectuals, to the Cinematheque
francaise, which sparked her love of film, Ulrike Ottinger charts a
city and its utopias. They live on in her collaged landscape of
memories in a workshop exhibition complimenting her film Paris
Calligrammes (2019). Ulrike Ottinger's (*1942 Konstanz, Germany)
films were shown at the most important international festivals and
honored at various major museums, including the Centre Pompidou,
Paris, the Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid, and the Museum of Modern Art,
New York. With her photographs she was represented at the documenta
and the Biennale di Venezia. Exhibition: HKW, Haus der Kulturen der
Welt, Berlin 23.8-13.10.2019
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