Writing Against Boundaries: Nationality, Ethnicity and Gender in the German-speaking Context

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Barbara Kosta, Helga Kraft
Rodopi, 2003 - 223 páginas
Writing against Boundaries. Nationality, Ethnicity and Gender in the German-speaking Context presents a series of essays by prominent scholars who critically explore the intersection of nation and subjectivity, the production of national identities, and the tense negotiation of multiculturalism in German-speaking countries. By looking at a wide spectrum of texts that range from Richard Wagner's operas to Hans Bellmer's art, and to literature by Aras Ören, Irene Dische, Annette Kolb, Elizabeth Langgässer, Karin Reschke, Christa Wolf, to contemporary German theater by Bettina Fless, Elfriede Jelinek, Anna Langhoff, Emine Sevgi Özdamar, and to Monika Treut's films, the volume explores the intersection of gender, ethnicity and nation and examines concepts of national culture and the foreigner or so-called 'other.' Focusing on such issues as immigration, xenophobia, gender, and sexuality, the volume looks at narratives that sustain the myth of a homogeneous nation, and those that disrupt it. It responds to a growing concern with borders and identity in a time in which borders are tightening as the demands of globalization increase.
 

Índice

Writing against Boundaries
1
Richard Wagners
9
Exile and Nation Body and Gender in the Works of Talvj
29
Individual and National Identity
39
Narratives of Nomadism or Copying German Culture
47
Fascism Gender and Hans Bellmers Dolls
61
Nation Memory and Austrias Fascist
81
Aras Örens Eine verspätete
99
The Political Plays of Bettina
113
MedeaMyths and National Discourse in Texts
131
Women Breaking Their Generational
141
The Body as Exile in the Works of Irene Dische
167
Postmodern Authorship
177
Bibliography and Filmography
197
Contributors to this Volume
213
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Página 7 - ... home is no longer just one place. It is locations. Home is that place which enables and promotes varied and everchanging perspectives, a place where one discovers new ways of seeing reality, frontiers of difference. One confronts and accepts dispersal and fragmentation as part of the construction of a new world order that reveals more fully where we are, who we can become, an order that does not demand forgetting. "Our struggle is also a struggle of memory against forgetting.

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