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In the course of the 1970s, interdisciplinary German studies emerged in North America, breaking with what many in the field saw as a suffocating and politically tainted tradition of canon-based philology by broadening both the corpus of texts and the framing concept of culture. In the meantime the innovative impulses that characterized this response to the legacy of Germanistik have themselves become traditions. The essays in this volume critically examine a selection of those past attempts at renewal to gauge where we are now and how we move into the future: exile and forced migration, race…mehr
In the course of the 1970s, interdisciplinary German studies emerged in North America, breaking with what many in the field saw as a suffocating and politically tainted tradition of canon-based philology by broadening both the corpus of texts and the framing concept of culture. In the meantime the innovative impulses that characterized this response to the legacy of Germanistik have themselves become traditions. The essays in this volume critically examine a selection of those past attempts at renewal to gauge where we are now and how we move into the future: exile and forced migration, race and identity, humanism and utopian thought, solidarity and global inequality. A younger generation of scholars demonstrates how reviving and refining the questions of yore leads to new insights into literary and theatrical texts, fundamental philosophical and political ideas, and the structure of memory in ethnographic performance and photography. Looking back into the future is a self-reflexive gesture that asks how tradition inspires innovation, and it displays compelling evidence for the importance of historically informed cultural research in the field of German studies.
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Autorenporträt
Marc Silberman is Emeritus Professor of German, film studies, and interdisciplinary theater studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Inhaltsangabe
CONTENTS: Marc Silberman: Back to the Future - John K. Noyes: Goethe's Future: Nature, Technology, and Interpretation - Johan Siebers: Ernst Bloch's Geist der Utopie after a Century: A Janus-Faced Reading on the Trail of Hope - Mona Körte: Pass pro toto: European-Jewish Responses to State Narratives of Personhood - Ofer Ashkenazi: Strategies of Exile Photography: Helmar Lerski and Hans Casparius in Palestine - David D. Kim: What Is Solidarity? Reading Hannah Arendt between Innovation and Tradition - Hunter Bivens: Affective Labors of Socialist Construction in Early East German Literature - Ela Gezen: Brecht and Turkish Political Theater: Sermet Çagan's Savas Oyunu (1964) - Katrin Sieg: Exhibiting Blackness: Blacks and German Culture Revisited - Crister S. Garrett: Last Liberals Standing? German Politics and Transcultural Readings of Populism - Frank Trommler: Back to the Future of German Studies: Which Future? Which Past?
CONTENTS: Marc Silberman: Back to the Future - John K. Noyes: Goethe's Future: Nature, Technology, and Interpretation - Johan Siebers: Ernst Bloch's Geist der Utopie after a Century: A Janus-Faced Reading on the Trail of Hope - Mona Körte: Pass pro toto: European-Jewish Responses to State Narratives of Personhood - Ofer Ashkenazi: Strategies of Exile Photography: Helmar Lerski and Hans Casparius in Palestine - David D. Kim: What Is Solidarity? Reading Hannah Arendt between Innovation and Tradition - Hunter Bivens: Affective Labors of Socialist Construction in Early East German Literature - Ela Gezen: Brecht and Turkish Political Theater: Sermet Çagan's Savas Oyunu (1964) - Katrin Sieg: Exhibiting Blackness: Blacks and German Culture Revisited - Crister S. Garrett: Last Liberals Standing? German Politics and Transcultural Readings of Populism - Frank Trommler: Back to the Future of German Studies: Which Future? Which Past?
Rezensionen
«From Goethe to Seghers, from German-Jewish photography to contemporary museum practices, this volume offers an intriguing overview of the current state of German studies. It demonstrates that, while language and literature remain central to the enterprise, German studies in North America resonates with the questions faced by the humanities today.» (Stephen Brockmann, Professor of German, Carnegie Mellon University, former President of the German Studies Association)
«In 1969, the Wisconsin Workshop introduced interdisciplinarity to the study of German literature, inaugurating what we know as German studies. In 2017, the Workshop celebrated its 50th year with a conference that honored this transformative project. This volume demonstrates that the project continues at the cutting edge of our profession.» (Helen Fehervary, Emerita Professor of German, Ohio State University)
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