Detectives, dystopias, and poplit : studies in modern German genre fiction
著者
書誌事項
Detectives, dystopias, and poplit : studies in modern German genre fiction
(Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture / edited by James Hardin)
Camden House, 2014
- : hardcover
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注記
Bibliography: p. [243]-276
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The first broad treatment of German genre fiction, containing innovative new essays on a variety of genres and foregrounding concerns of gender, environmentalism, and memory.
Some of the most exciting research and teaching in the field of German Studies is being done on "genre fiction," including detective fiction, science fiction, and what is often called "poplit," to name but a few. Such non-canonical literature has long been marginalized by the German tradition of Bildung and the disciplinary practice of German literary studies (Germanistik). Even today, when the examination of non-canonical texts is well established and uncontroversial in other academic contexts, such texts remain understudied in German. And yet, the trend toward "German Studies" and "cultural studies" approaches within the field has raised considerable interest in theanalysis of genre fiction, resulting in both a great deal of new scholarship and a range of new courses. This first broad treatment of German genre fiction brings together innovative new scholarship, foregrounding themes of gender, environmentalism, and memory. It is an ideal companion to research and teaching. Written in accessible English, it speaks to a wide variety of disciplines beyond German Studies.
Contributors: Bruce B. Campbell, Ray Canoy, Kerry Dunne, Sonja Fritzsche, Maureen O. Gallagher, Adam R. King, Molly Knight, Vibeke Rutzou Petersen, Evan Torner, and Ailsa Wallace.
Bruce B. Campbell is Associate Professor of German Studies at the College ofWilliam and Mary. Alison Guenther-Pal is Assistant Professor of German and Film Studies at Lawrence University. Vibeke Rutzou Petersen is Professor Emerita of Women's Studies at Drake University.
目次
Introduction: Closing a Bildungslucke - Genre Fiction and Why It Is Important
German Science Fiction: Its Formative Works and Its Postwar Uses of the Holocaust
A Future History Out of Time: The Historical Context of Doeblin's Expressionist Dystopian Experiment, Berge Meere und Giganten
Eco-Eschbach: Sustainability in the Science Fiction of Andreas Eschbach
Murder in the Weimar Republic: Prejudice, Politics, and the Popular in the Socialist Crime Fiction of Hermynia Zur Muhlen
The Imaginary FBI: Jerry Cotton, the Nazi Roots of the Bundeskriminalamt, and the Cultural Politics of Detective Fiction in West Germany
Justice and Genre: The Krimi as a Site of Memory in Contemporary Germany
Detecting Identity: Reading the Clues in German-Language Crime Fiction by Klupfel and Kobr and Steinfest
The Pedagogy of Pulp: Liberated Sexuality and Its Consequences Through the Eyes of Vicki Baum's stud. chem. Helene Willfuer
The Kranzchen Library and the Creation of Teenage Identity
Close the Border, Mind the Gap: Pop Misogyny and Social Critique in Christian Kracht's Faserland
Bibliography
Notes on the Contributors
Index
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