Contemplating violence : critical studies in modern German culture

Bibliographic Information

Contemplating violence : critical studies in modern German culture

edited by Stefani Engelstein and Carl Niekerk

(Amsterdamer Beiträge zur neueren Germanistik, 79)

Rodopi, 2011

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Note

Based on the conference "Violence in German literature, culture, and intellectual history, 1789-1938," at University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign), Oct. 14-16, 2005

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume illuminates the vexed treatment of violence in the German cultural tradition between two crucial, and radically different, violent outbreaks: the French Revolution, and the Holocaust and Second World War. The contributions undermine the notion of violence as an intermittent or random visitor in the imagination and critical theory of modern German culture. Instead, they make a case for violence in its many manifestations as constitutive for modern theories of art, politics, identity, and agency. While the contributions elucidate trends in theories of violence leading up to the Holocaust, they also provide a genealogy of the stakes involved in ongoing discussions of the legitimate uses of violence, and of state, individual, and collective agency in its perpetration. The chapters engage the theorization of violence through analysis of cultural products, including literature, museum planning, film, and critical theory. This collection will be of interest to scholars in the fields of Literary and Cultural Studies, Critical Theory, Philosophy, Gender Studies, History, Museum Studies, and beyond.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgements Contributors Stefani Engelstein and Carl Niekerk: Introduction. Violence, Culture, Aesthetics: Germany 1789-1938 The Other Side of Modernity: War and the French Revolution Stephanie M. Hilger: Sara's Pain: The French Revolution in Therese Huber's Die Familie Seldorf (1795-1796) Stefani Engelstein: The Father in Fatherland: Violent Ideology and Corporeal Paternity in Kleist Jeffrey Grossman: Fractured Histories: Heine's Responses to Violence and Revolution Imagining the Primitive
  • the Return of the Repressed Laurie Johnson: The Curse of Enthusiasm: William Lovell and Modern Violence Lynne Tatlock: Communion at the Sign of the Wild Man Carl Niekerk: Constructing the Fascist Subject: Violence, Gender, and Sexuality in OEdoen von Horvath's Jugend ohne Gott Violence in the Age of Globalization
  • German Culture and Its Others Barbara Fischer: From the Emancipation of the Jews to the Emancipation from the Jews: On the Rhetoric, Power and Violence of German-Jewish "Dialogue" Mark Christian Thompson: The Negro Who Disappeared: Race in Kafka's Amerika Claudia Breger: Performing Violence: Joe May's Indian Tomb (1921) Modernism, Modernization, and Representation Lutz Koepnick: The Violence of the Aesthetic Patrizia McBride: Montage and Violence in Weimar Culture: Kurt Schwitters' Reassembled Individuals Peter M. McIsaac: Preserving the Bloody Remains: Legacies of Violence in Austria's Heeresgeschichtliches Museum Index

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