Grand Valley State University

German literature of the 1990s and beyond, normalization and the Berlin Republic, Stuart Taberner

Label
German literature of the 1990s and beyond, normalization and the Berlin Republic, Stuart Taberner
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-272) and index
Main title
German literature of the 1990s and beyond
Oclc number
56590714
Responsibility statement
Stuart Taberner
Series statement
Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
Sub title
normalization and the Berlin Republic
Summary
This book presents a comprehensive, lively account of recent developments in German fiction at a moment when -- for the first time in many years -- German authors are once again the subject of international attention and acclaim. It introduces English-speaking audiences to the complex dilemmas that are shaping the ways in which Germans are presently defining themselves, their difficult past, and the new "Berlin Republic." The theme that runs throughout the volume is the ongoing debate on German "normalization." In offering a wide-ranging consideration of contemporary German literature, the book complements a broad discussion of trends in present-day German politics, society, and culture with detailed readings of texts by internationally renowned figures as W.G. Sebald, Günter Grass, Martin Walser, Marcel Beyer, Ingo Schulze, Judith Hermann, Thomas Brussig, and Bernhard Schlink, and by newer, emerging writers. Topics include the literary debates of the 1990s, the literary market and marketing, literary responses to the former East and West Germany in the age of globalization and to the Nazi past and portrayals of "ordinary Germans," depictions of "German wartime suffering," contemporary writing on "Jewish fates" and efforts to revive the "German-Jewish symbiosis," and finally, the recent wave of writing about the provinces
Table Of Contents
Literary debates since unification : "European" modernism or "American" pop? -- Literature in the East -- Literature in the West -- Confronting the Nazi past I : "political correctness" -- Confronting the Nazi past II : German perpetrators or German victims? -- A German-Jewish symbiosis? -- From the province to Berlin
Content
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