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The focus of this volume is the prose work of the Austrian-Jewish
writer Albert Drach (1902-1995). The author explores Drach's
critique of totalitarian culture by examining his representations
of power and powerlessness, identity and difference, along with
cultural processes of exclusion. Drawing on areas as diverse as
psychoanalysis, the grotesque and post-colonial theory, this study
identifies a significant discursive difference between Drach's
shorter fictional prose and the Holocaust trilogy. Drach's highly
original linguistic dexterity, his much-discussed 'protocol style',
offers a sophisticated critique of the relationship between power,
insubordination and capitulation. This is the first English
language study dedicated to the complex prose of Albert Drach. It
is of interest to students and scholars of Austrian literature,
German-Jewish literature as well as Exile and Holocaust Studies.
Bringing together established and emerging scholars of old age from
the Humanities and Social Sciences as well as gerontologists and
medical practitioners, this open access book both showcases new
scholarship and provides new methods and concepts for ongoing
conversations about old age as an object of analysis in
contemporary culture. Cultural policy makers and scholars alike
regularly describe a “visibility crisis” of old age, a
consistent erasure or repression of images of older people from
public view. Co-edited by an art historian and two literary
scholars with a shared interest in memory, Framing Ageing examines
the in/visibility of old age from a range of disciplinary angles,
including philosophy, social history, comparative literature and
anthropology. In doing so, in addition to examining literary texts,
this volume carries out innovative analyses of visual material
including sculpture, buildings, photographs, from fine art to
amateur production and commercial images. Framing Ageing addresses
scholars from across the Humanities and Social Sciences who want to
approach the urgent topic of old age in their work, mapping the
intellectual state of the field and putting the most salient
concepts in action. The ebook editions of this book are available
open access under a CC BY 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.
Open access was funded by The Wellcome Trust.
Examines the heightened role of politics in contemporary German and
Austrian cultural productions and institutions and what it means
for German Studies. As debates about Europe, migration, resurgent
nationalism, and neoliberalism intensify in Germany and Austria,
politics has gained particular prominence in cultural production
and cultural institutions. How does this development affect German
Studies as a discipline and a practice? Volume 14 of Edinburgh
German Yearbook examines political or politicized aspects of
contemporary life that have become increasingly significant for
culture today. The contributions gathered here offer engaging
readings of contemporary literary texts (including work by Sasa
Stanisic, Anke Stelling, and Timur Vermes), films (by Fatih Akin,
Ruth Beckermann, and Andreas Dresen), and other forms of cultural
intervention (the polemics of Max Czollek and Oliver Polak, and the
activism of the left-feminist group Burschenschaft Hysteria). These
encourage us to consider how communities are being (re)shaped by
current political and social crises, antagonisms around memory
cultures, questions of European identity, as well as challenges to
the status of an assumed Leitkultur and the discourse of
integration.
Investigates the function and meaning of sadness in German,
Austrian, and Swiss literature and culture from the 18th century to
the present. Established, commissioned, and edited by the
Department of German at the University of Edinburgh, the Edinburgh
German Yearbook is the only peer-reviewed German Studies
publication that each year invites scholarly contributions on a
single topic of current challenge to the field. Focusing on
"Sadness and Melancholy in German-language Literature and Culture,"
volume 6 investigates the often subversive function and meaning of
sadness and melancholy inGerman-language literature and culture
from the seventeenth century to the present where, arguably, it has
fallen from the heights of melancholy genius and artistic
creativity of earlier epochs to become the embarrassing other ofa
Western civilization that prizes happiness as the mark of
successful modern living. Interrogating the distinction between
sadness as an anthropological constant and melancholy as a shifting
cultural discourse, the contributionsexplore how different authors
use established literary and cultural topoi from melancholy
discourses to comment on topics as diverse as war, religion, gender
inequality, and modernity. As well as essays on canonical figures
including Goethe and Thomas Mann, the volume features studies of
sadness in lesser-known writers such as Betty Paoli and Julia
Schoch. Contributors: Per Brandt, Peter Damrau, Kristian Donko,
Svenja Frank, Jens Hobus, StephenJoy, Johannes D. Kaminski,
Franziska Meyer, Richard Millington, Karin S. Wozonig. Mary
Cosgrove is Reader in German at the University of Edinburgh. Anna
Richards is Lecturer in German at Birkbeck College, University
ofLondon.
Uncovers the literary traditions of melancholy that inform major
works of postwar and contemporary German literature dealing with
the Holocaust and the Nazi period. In German Studies the literary
phenomenon of melancholy, which has a longstanding and diverse
history in European letters, has typically been associated with the
Early Modern and Baroque periods, Romanticism, and the crisis of
modernity. This association, alongside the dominant
psychoanalytical view of melancholy in German memory discourses
since the 1960s, has led to its neglect as an important literary
mode in postwar German literature, a situation the present book
seeks to redress by identifying and analyzing epochal postwar works
that use melancholy traditions to comment on German history in the
aftermath of the Holocaust. It focuses on five writers - Gunter
Grass, Wolfgang Hildesheimer, Peter Weiss, W. G. Sebald, and Iris
Hanika - who reflect on the legacy of Auschwitz as intellectuals
trying to negotiate a relationship to the past based on the stigma
of belonging to a perpetrator collective (Grass, Sebald, Hanika)
or, broadly speaking, to the victim collective (Weiss,
Hildesheimer), in order to develop a melancholy ethics of memory
for the Holocaust and the Nazi past. It will appeal to scholars and
students of German Studies,Comparative Literature, Cultural
Studies, Cultural Memory, and Holocaust Studies. Mary Cosgrove is
Reader in German at the University of Edinburgh.
Essays shedding light on the increasingly open cultural debate on
the German past. Since unification in 1990, Germany has seen a boom
in the confrontation with memory, evident in a sharp increase in
novels, films, autobiographies, and other forms of public discourse
that engage with the long-term effects of National Socialism across
generations. Taking issue with the concept of
"Vergangenheitsbewaltigung," or coming to terms with the Nazi past,
which after 1945 guided nearly all debate on the topic, the
contributors to this volume view contemporary German culture
through the more dynamic concept of "memory contests," which sees
all forms of memory, public or private, as ongoing processes of
negotiating identity in the present. Touching on gender,
generations, memory and postmemory, trauma theory, ethnicity,
historiography, and family narrative, the contributions offer a
comprehensive picture of current German memory debates, in so doing
shedding light on the struggle to construct a Germanidentity
mindful of but not wholly defined by the horrors of National
Socialism and the Holocaust. Contributors: Peter Fritzsche, Anne
Fuchs, Elizabeth Boa, Stefan Willer, Chloe E. M. Paver, Matthias
Fiedler, J. J. Long, Dagmar C. G. Lorenz, Cathy S. Gelbin, Jennifer
E. Michaels, Mary Cosgrove, Andrew Plowman, Roger Woods. Anne Fuchs
is Professor of Modern German literature and Georg Grote is
Lecturer in German history, both at University College Dublin. Mary
Cosgrove is Lecturer in German at the University of Edinburgh.
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