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Memory Matters : Generational Responses to Germany's Nazi Past in Recent Women's Literature / Caroline Schaumann.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Interdisciplinary German Cultural Studies ; 4Publisher: Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, [2008]Copyright date: ©2008Description: 1 online resource (345 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9783110202434
  • 9783110206593
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • P
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
  • Issued also in print.
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- War Children and Child Survivors -- Memories and Mourning: Christa Wolf s Patterns of -- Childhood -- Trauma and Testimony: Ruth Klüger s weiter -- leben -- The Children of Survivors and Bystanders -- Barbara Honigmann s Belated Appropriation of her -- Jewish Heritage: From Roman von einem Kinde (Novel by a Child) to Ein -- Kapitel aus meinem Leben (A Chapter of My Life) -- Wibke Bruhns s Father-Portrait: My Father s -- Country: The Story of a German Family -- The Grandchildren of Nazi Victims, Perpetrators, -- Collaborators, and Bystanders -- Images and Imagination: Monika Maron s Pavel s -- Letters -- Tanja Dückers s Sensual Historiography:Ž -- Himmelskörper (Celestial Bodies) -- Backmatter
Summary: Memory Matters juxtaposes in tripartite structure texts by a child of German bystanders (Wolf), an Austrian-Jewish child-survivor (Klüger), a daughter of Jewish émigrés (Honigmann), a daughter of an officer involved in the German resistance (Bruhns), a granddaughter of a baptized Polish Jew (Maron), and a granddaughter of German refuges from East Prussia (Dückers). Placed outside of the distorting victim-perpetrator, Jewish-German, man-woman, and war-postwar binary, it becomes visible that the texts neither complete nor contradict each other, but respond to one another by means of inspiration, reverberation, refraction, incongruity, and ambiguity. Focusing on genealogies of women, the book delineates a different cultural memory than the counting of (male-inflected) generations and a male-dominated Holocaust and postwar literature canon. It examines intergenerational conflicts and the negotiation of memories against the backdrop of a complicated mother-daughter relationship that follows unpredictable patterns and provokes both discord and empathy. Schaumann’s approach questions the assumption that German-gentile and German-Jewish postwar experiences are necessarily diametrically opposed (i.e. respond to a “negative symbiosis”) and uncovers intersections and continuities in addition to conflicts.

Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- War Children and Child Survivors -- Memories and Mourning: Christa Wolf s Patterns of -- Childhood -- Trauma and Testimony: Ruth Klüger s weiter -- leben -- The Children of Survivors and Bystanders -- Barbara Honigmann s Belated Appropriation of her -- Jewish Heritage: From Roman von einem Kinde (Novel by a Child) to Ein -- Kapitel aus meinem Leben (A Chapter of My Life) -- Wibke Bruhns s Father-Portrait: My Father s -- Country: The Story of a German Family -- The Grandchildren of Nazi Victims, Perpetrators, -- Collaborators, and Bystanders -- Images and Imagination: Monika Maron s Pavel s -- Letters -- Tanja Dückers s Sensual Historiography:Ž -- Himmelskörper (Celestial Bodies) -- Backmatter

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Memory Matters juxtaposes in tripartite structure texts by a child of German bystanders (Wolf), an Austrian-Jewish child-survivor (Klüger), a daughter of Jewish émigrés (Honigmann), a daughter of an officer involved in the German resistance (Bruhns), a granddaughter of a baptized Polish Jew (Maron), and a granddaughter of German refuges from East Prussia (Dückers). Placed outside of the distorting victim-perpetrator, Jewish-German, man-woman, and war-postwar binary, it becomes visible that the texts neither complete nor contradict each other, but respond to one another by means of inspiration, reverberation, refraction, incongruity, and ambiguity. Focusing on genealogies of women, the book delineates a different cultural memory than the counting of (male-inflected) generations and a male-dominated Holocaust and postwar literature canon. It examines intergenerational conflicts and the negotiation of memories against the backdrop of a complicated mother-daughter relationship that follows unpredictable patterns and provokes both discord and empathy. Schaumann’s approach questions the assumption that German-gentile and German-Jewish postwar experiences are necessarily diametrically opposed (i.e. respond to a “negative symbiosis”) and uncovers intersections and continuities in addition to conflicts.

Issued also in print.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Feb 2023)