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This collection reflects on the development of disability studies
in German-speaking Europe and brings together interdisciplinary
perspectives on disability in German, Austrian, and Swiss history
and culture. Ableism remains the most socially acceptable form of
intolerance, with pejoratives referencing disability - and
intellectual disability in particular - remaining largely
unquestioned among many. Yet the understanding, depiction, and
representation of disability is also clearly in a process of
transformation. This volume analyzes that transformation, taking a
close look at attitudes toward disability in historical and
contemporary German-speaking contexts. The volume begins with an
overview of the emergence and growth of disability studies in
German-speaking Europe against the background of the field's
emergence a decade or so earlier in the US and UK. The differences
in timing, methodology, and research concentrations bring into
focus how each cultural context has shaped the field of disability
studies in its multiple and diverse approaches. Building on recent
scholarship that uses a cultural studies approach, the volume's
three sections analyze constructs of disability and ability in
history, memory, and culture. The essays in the history section
examine how the emotions, morality, and power have played into -
and still do play into - the individual's experience of disability.
Those in the memory section grapple with the origins of the Nazi
persecution of people with disabilities, the fight for recognition
of this genocide, and the politics of its commemoration. Finally,
the culture section offers close readings of disability in literary
and filmic texts from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Essays examining representations of disaster in German and
international contexts, exploring the nexus between disruption and
recovery through narrative from the eighteenth century to the
present. Destroying human habitat and taking human lives,
disasters, be they natural, man-made, or a combination, threaten
large populations, even entire nations and societies. They also
disrupt the existing order and cause discontinuity in our sense of
self and our perceptions of the world. To restore order, not only
must human beings be rescued and affected areas rebuilt, but the
reality of the catastrophe must also be transformed into narrative.
The essays in this collection examine representations of disaster
in literature, film, and mass media in German and international
contexts, exploring the nexus between disruption and recovery
through narrative from the eighteenth century to the present.
Topics include the Lisbon earthquake, the Paris Commune, the
Hamburg and Dresden fire-bombings in the Second World War, nuclear
disasters in Alexander Kluge's films, the filmic aesthetics of
catastrophe, Yoko Tawada's lectures on the Fukushima disaster and
Christa Wolf's novel Stoerfall in light of that same disaster,
Joseph Haslinger and the tsunami of 2004, traditions regarding
avalanche disaster in the Tyrol, and the problems and implications
of defining disaster. Contributors: Carol Anne Costabile-Heming,
Yasemin Dayioglu-Yucel, Janine Hartman, Jan Hinrichsen, Claudia
Jerzak, Lars Koch, Franz Mauelshagen, Tanja Nusser, Torsten
Pflugmacher, Christoph Weber. Katharina Gerstenberger is Professor
and Chair of the Department of Languages and Literature at the
University of Utah. Tanja Nusser is DAAD Visiting Associate
Professor of German at the University of Cincinnati.
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