The Individual, Identity and Innovation
Signals from Contemporary Literature and the New Germany
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 1. December 1993
Book
Paperback/Softback
377 pages
978-3-906751-75-7 (ISBN)
Description
The volume explores aspects of individual identity and innovation in contemporary German literature with particular reference to the implications of German unification. Approaches to biography and autobiography, cultural roots, sexuality, and gender are placed in relevant ideological and aesthetic frameworks to provide a broad stock-taking of the current situation from the individual point of view. Analyses of recent work by such contemporary writers as Strauß, Handke, Enzensberger, von Westphalen, Wolf, Königsdorf, Liebmann, Krauß, Neumann, Specht, Jelinek, Fichte, Nöstlinger, Lorenc and Walser are complemented by discussions of Johnson, Canetti, Bernhard and Celan and by critical appraisals of theatre (Wendestücke), postmodernism and the poetry of the younger generation in the eastern Länder, and the prospects of an all-German literature.
Reviews / Votes
«What is particularly refreshing about this book is its editors' ability to focus on specifically aesthetic and literary concerns while simultaneously addressing larger issues of German national identity and politics...Both the editors and the contributors to this volume are to be congratulated on a provocative addition to the slowly growing library of works dealing with the cultural implications of German unification.» (Stephen Brockmann, The German Quarterly)More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Bern
Switzerland
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 15 cm
Width: 22 cm
Weight
535 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-906751-75-7 (9783906751757)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
The Editors: Arthur William and Stuart Parkes are editors (with Roland Smith) of Literature on the Threshold: The German Novel in the 1980s (1990) and German Literature at a Time of Change, 1989-1990: German Unity and German Identity in Literary Perspective (1991). Stuart Parkes, a graduate of Oxford University who holds a Ph.D. from Bradford University, is Reader in German at Sunderland University. He has a particular interest in Martin Walser. Among his numerous publications is Literature and Politics in West Germany (1986), a field in which he is an acknowledged expert. Arthur Williams, a graduate of Keele University, is Senior Lecturer in German Studies and Head of the Department of Modern Languages at Bradford University. His wide-ranging publications include Broadcasting and Democracy in West Germany (1976) and articles on Thomas Mann, GDR education, and West German social policy. He has a particular interest in Botho Strauß.