Authors and the World: Literary Authorship in Modern Germany: New Directions in German Studies
Autor Dr. Rebecca Braunen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 mar 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501391064
ISBN-10: 1501391062
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501391062
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Identifies and challenges gendered understandings of authorship with contemporary major prize-winning authors Ulrike Draesner, Olga Martynowa and Ulrike Almut Sandig as examples
Notă biografică
Rebecca Braun is Established Professor of German and World Literature and Executive Dean of the College of Arts, Social Sciences & Celtic Studies at National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland. She has published widely on practices of authorship around the world, and with particular expertise in German-language writing. Major publications include Constructing Authorship in the Work of Günter Grass (2008), Cultural Impact in the German Context (2010; co-edited with Lyn Marven), Transnational German Studies (2020; co-edited with Benedict Schofield), and World Authorship (2020; co-edited with Tobias Boes & Emily Spiers).
Cuprins
List of FiguresAcknowledgementsNote on TranslationsIntroduction: Rethinking Goethe's World Literature through Questions of Authorship1. Four Modes of Authorship across the German Twentieth Century2. The Exemplary Creator: Modelling Authorship in Post-War West Germany3. The Exemplary Pedagogue: Alternative Foundations for Belonging in the GDR 4. Mediating Authorship in Berlin and Frankfurt, 1959-19895. After the Death of the Author: The Rise of the Utopian Mode, 1988-20186. New Collaborations: Models of Transnational Authorship in Contemporary German-speaking EuropeIn Conversation: Ulrike Draesner: On Creating Contexts for LiteratureIn Conversation: Olga Martynova on Living in Multiple Literary WorldsIn Conversation: Ulrike Almut Sandig on Collaborating across Media, Genres, and CountriesBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
Rebecca Braun's amazingly varied study of authorship shifts the view from the lives of writers to the practice of authorship - the crafted persona of a whole social environment. Along the way, Braun shakes up our understanding of the contemporary German literary scene. Moving quickly past the familiar male gatekeepers of Grass, Enzensberger and Walser, she brings us face-to-face with neglected literary mavericks from the East and new voices of women immigrants from Russia, Romaniaand Serbia. A very original study in which 'place' becomes a fleeting ideological Heimat.
Rebecca Braun's Authors and the World represents an important foray into a new contemporary typology of authorship that will benefit scholars in literary studies and beyond. With a focus on German-speaking literature, this investigation of celebratory, commemorative, utopian and satirical modes of authorship provides the reader with pertinent insights into the post-war literary industry and its modes of self-representation and brings into focus female writers marginalized in recent canonization processes.
Highly original and immensely readable, Rebecca Braun's impressive study provides us with a new model for understanding literary authorship and the contexts and factors that shape it in the twentieth century and beyond. The result is both a brilliant reading of cultural history and an important theoretical re-evaluation of known concepts of authorship. Through detailed interpretations of a stunning variety of cultural texts and archives (novels, journalistic writings, poetry, films and documentaries, social networks, places, and objects), Braun develops four distinct modes of performative authorship (celebratory, commemorative, utopian, satirical) and shows how they can overlap, coalesce, and inflect one another. She uses this innovative framework to read of some of the most important texts of the German-language canon in East and West Germany; she moves from the writing of the "literary giants" of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Thomas Mann to the contemporary, transnational texts of Olga Martynova and Katja Petrowskaja. Conversations with three female authors round out this remarkable book and illustrate in practice Braun's central argument that authorship is a co-creative, iterative process. Authors and the World will be an indispensable reference in German Studies on contemporary literary authorship. I loved reading it!
Rebecca Braun's Authors and the World represents an important foray into a new contemporary typology of authorship that will benefit scholars in literary studies and beyond. With a focus on German-speaking literature, this investigation of celebratory, commemorative, utopian and satirical modes of authorship provides the reader with pertinent insights into the post-war literary industry and its modes of self-representation and brings into focus female writers marginalized in recent canonization processes.
Highly original and immensely readable, Rebecca Braun's impressive study provides us with a new model for understanding literary authorship and the contexts and factors that shape it in the twentieth century and beyond. The result is both a brilliant reading of cultural history and an important theoretical re-evaluation of known concepts of authorship. Through detailed interpretations of a stunning variety of cultural texts and archives (novels, journalistic writings, poetry, films and documentaries, social networks, places, and objects), Braun develops four distinct modes of performative authorship (celebratory, commemorative, utopian, satirical) and shows how they can overlap, coalesce, and inflect one another. She uses this innovative framework to read of some of the most important texts of the German-language canon in East and West Germany; she moves from the writing of the "literary giants" of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Thomas Mann to the contemporary, transnational texts of Olga Martynova and Katja Petrowskaja. Conversations with three female authors round out this remarkable book and illustrate in practice Braun's central argument that authorship is a co-creative, iterative process. Authors and the World will be an indispensable reference in German Studies on contemporary literary authorship. I loved reading it!