
Germany from the Outside
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Emphasizing current issues of migration, displacement, systemic injustice, and belonging, Germany from the Outside explores new opportunities for understanding and shaping community at a time when many are questioning the ability of cultural practices to effect structural change. Located at the nexus of cultural, political, historiographical, and philosophical discourses, the essays in this volume inform discussions about next directions for German Studies and for the Humanities in a fraught era.
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Germany from the Outside is a significant contribution to interdisciplinary German Studies that owes its inspiration to new approaches in postcolonial and migration studies. With its emphasis on stories of expulsion, exile, and displacement from Goethe to Heine, from Brecht to Yoko Tawada, and from Heiner Mueller to OEzdamar, and with essays written by leading scholars, it will have a lasting impact on international Germanistik. * Paul Michael Luetzeler, Rosa May Distinguished University Professor in the Humanities and Director of the Max Kade Center for Contemporary German Literature, Washington University, St. Louis, USA * Germany from the Outside forces us to question why teaching and research in German Studies continue to be haunted by the legacies of racial and ethnic nationalism, empire, monolingualism, and one-dimensional notions of mobility and exchange. This volume provides a much-needed critical vocabulary for analyzing what has been perhaps evident yet underappreciated all along: novelists, philosophers, dramatists, and filmmakers have been grappling with complex identifications, leading lives shaped by displacement, fighting against exclusion, and resisting a stable notion of Germanness. The contributors thus illuminate the diversity and plurality that emerges when we look at German cultural production from multiple positions. * Vance Byrd, Presidential Associate Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures, University of Pennsylvania, USA *More details
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Person
Content
Introduction
Laurie Ruth Johnson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
I: Reading German Cultural History Differently
1. Finding Odysseus's Scars Again: Hyperlinked Literary Histories in the Age of Refugees
B. Venkat Mani, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
2. Between the Court and the Port, but never Part of a Nation: Friederike Brun's Domesticated Cosmopolitanism
Birgit Tautz, Bowdoin College, USA
3. On the Inside Looking Out: Fichte, the University, and the Psychopolitics of German Idealism
Laurie Ruth Johnson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
4. Rewriting German Literary History from the Outside in: J.M. Coetzee's Elizabeth Costello
David Kim, University of California-Los Angeles, USA
II: Stories of Expulsion, Exile, and Displacement
5. Looking for Heinrich Heine with Nazim Hikmet and E.S. OEzdamar
Azade Seyhan, Bryn Mawr College, USA
6. Between Times and Places: German Identity in Albert Vigoleis Thelen's Refugee Memoirs from Spain and Portugal (31 August - 1 September 1939)
Carl Niekerk, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
7. Writing Germany with Brazil: Julia Mann's Memoirs
Veronika Fuechtner, Dartmouth College, USA
8. From Vienna to the Midwest: Austrian Refugees and Quaker Rescue Efforts after 1938
Bettina Brandt, Pennsylvania State University, USA
9. Keeping Time: Trauma as Intimate Alienation in Hans Keilson's Writing
Anna M. Parkinson, Northwestern University, USA
III: Rewriting German Culture
10. Tracing the Continual Present: Yoko Tawada and Vilem Flusser
Gizem Arslan, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
11. Mobilizing the Archive: Marica Bodrozic and Deniz Utl's Unterhaltungen deutscher Eingewanderten
Claudia Breger, Columbia University, USA
12. Constructing an "Inside": Transcultural Laughter Communities in Fatma Aydemir's Ellbogen (2017) and Olga Grjasnowa's Der Russe ist einer, der Birken liebt (2012)
Lucas Riddle, Bowdoin College, USA
13. Screening Urban Space and Belonging in Berlin: Contemporary Berliners in Sheri Hagen's Auf den zweiten Blick/At Second Glance (2013), Ines Johnson-Spain's Becoming Black (2019), and Amelia Umuhire's Polyglot (2015)
Berna Gueneli, University of Georgia, USA
14. Bertolt Brecht's Me-ti or the Aesthetics of Translation: Universal Love, Mutual Benefits, and Transience
Chunjie Zhang, University of California-Davis, USA
15. Clowns in Exile: Hamletmaschine and the (In)human
Olivia Landry, Lehigh University, USA
Bibliography
Index
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