TY - BOOK AU - Ben-Horin,Michal TI - Musical Biographies: The Music of Memory in Post-1945 German Literature T2 - Interdisciplinary German Cultural Studies , SN - 9783110457957 AV - ML3849 .B35 2016 U1 - 830.9/3578 23 PY - 2016///] CY - Berlin, Boston PB - De Gruyter KW - German fiction KW - History and criticism KW - 20th century KW - Memory in literature KW - Music and literature KW - History KW - Austria KW - Germany KW - Music in literature KW - Criticism, interpretation, etc KW - Erzählwissenschaft KW - Holocaust KW - Kultur / Deutschland KW - Musikalische Poetik KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / General KW - bisacsh KW - German culture KW - Musical Poetics KW - narrative N1 - Frontmatter --; Acknowledgments --; Contents --; Overture. German Catastrophe and the Rebirth of Musical Biography --; 1. Thomas Mann: Dissonance as a Mode of Documentation --; Interlude I. Siegfried: Atonality and Decentralized Narrative --; 2. Günter Grass: Rhythms of a Fictitious Testimony --; Interlude II. Clown: Ironic Tune between Memory and Oblivion --; 3. Ingeborg Bachmann: The Resonance of Trauma --; Interlude III. Pianist: Austria from a Musician’s Perspective --; 4. Thomas Bernhard: Writing, Playing, and the Compulsion to Repeat --; Interlude IV. Composer: Sound Transfiguration after Reunification --; Coda. The End of Musical Biography? --; Bibliography --; Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - Since the second half of the twentieth century various routes, including history and literature, are offered in dealing with the catastrophe of World War II and the Holocaust. Historiographies and novels are of course written with words; how can they bear witness to and reverberate with traumatic experience that escapes or resists language? In search for an alternative mode of expression and representation, this volume focuses on postwar German and Austrian writers who made use of music in their exploration of the National Socialist past. Their works invoke, however, new questions: What happens when we cross the line between narration and documentation, and between memory and a musical piece? How does identification and fascination affect our reading of the text? What kind of ethical issues do these testimonies raise? As this volume shows, reading these musical biographies is both troubling and compelling since they ‘fail’ to come to terms with the past. In playing the haunting music that does not let us put the matter to rest, they call into question not only the exclusion of personal stories by official narratives, but also challenge writers’ and readers’ most intimate perspectives on an unmasterable past UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110460933 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110460933 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110460933/original ER -