Representing Social Precarity in German Literature and Film: New Directions in German Studies
Editat de Sophie Duvernoy, Dr. Karsten Olson, Ulrich Plassen Limba Engleză Hardback – noi 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501391477
ISBN-10: 150139147X
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 49 b&w images
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 150139147X
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 49 b&w images
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Introduces and forges connections among a diverse range of topics and contributors within the interdisciplinary field of German Studies
Notă biografică
Sophie Duvernoy holds a PhD in German from Yale University, USA, and is a translator in Berlin, Germany.Karsten Olson is Lecturer of German Studies at the University of North Carolina Asheville, USA. Ulrich Plass is Professor of Letters and German Studies at Wesleyan University, USA.
Cuprins
List of FIguresList of TablesNotes on ContributorsIntroduction(Ulrich Plass, Wesleyan University, USA)1. Literature and the History of Precarity: Interview with Patrick Eiden-Offe (ZfL Berlin)(Karsten Olson, University of North Carolina, Asheville, USA)2. Precarious Property: Adam Müller's Theory of Poetic Possession (Jörg Kreienbrock, Northwestern University, USA)3. Die Judenbuche and the Rights of the Poor(Karsten Olson, University of North Carolina, Asheville, USA)4. We Poor People: The Personal Experience of Precariousness in Dantons Tod and Woyzeck(Michael Swellander, University of Iowa, USA)5. Hilfe von Mensch zu Mensch: Social Precarity and the Elberfeld System (Rebekah O. McMillan, Angelo State University, USA)6. Precarity and Form: Lu Märten's Intervention in the Worker's Autobiography (Mari Jarris, Princeton University, USA)7. In Search of a Divine Calling, or Lunch: Unproductive Labor in Emmy Hennings' Das Brandmal (Sophie Duvernoy, Yale University, USA)8. Typists as 'billige Ware': White-Collar Women's Work in Weimar Literature (Mary Hennessy, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)9. Unemployment, Organization, and Reproductive Self-Determination in Kuhle Wampe (Ulrich Plass, Wesleyan University, USA)10. "Hidden Stockpiles of Words and Images": An Interview with Thomas Heise (Matthias Rothe, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA)11. Biopolitics and Superstition in Barbara Albert's Böse Zellen (Lena Trüper, UCLA, USA)12. Precarious Lives and Social Decline in Marlene Streeruwitz' Jessica, 30. and Kristine Bilkaus Die Glücklichen (Lisa Wille, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany)13. Linguistic Precarity in Contemporary German Film (Lindsay Preseau, University of Cincinnati, USA)Index
Recenzii
In this groundbreaking interdisciplinary volume, the editors and contributors shed new light on contemporary precarity by tracing its evolution from the beginning of industrialization. The book stands out for its focus on theories and aesthetic practices of resistance, from Romantic anti-capitalism through Weimar-era queer autobiography up to East German documentaries and contemporary literature and film, and it makes significant contributions to our understanding of precarity and its representations.
'Precarity' has become a term of art in social and cultural criticism, but the angle it brings to the discussion hasn't always been clear. Duvernoy, Olson, and Plass's volume fills readers in on that angle, making a case for attending to representations of the downtrodden more ecumenical than those of only industrial immiseration. Without polemicizing against a Marxist tradition, the volume's essays demonstrate the value of the subjectively and descriptively attuned term 'precarity' for uncovering depictions of personal, contingent, and emotional vulnerabilities often overlooked by normative or teleological approaches. The volume casts new light on canonical as well as neglected works from romanticism and modernism to contemporary film and literature.
In this timely and sorely needed volume, rich historical depth is added to the often all-too-presentist application of 'precarity' to recent works of art, laying bare the deep connection between precarity and discourses on and representations of 'the poor' since 1800. Within a rigorous theoretical framework of critical theory, Marxism, gender theory, and the history of work and labor, these essays explore - via precarity - ongoing dispossessions, forms of subjectivation, and forms of social (non-)relations, bringing agency and utopian desires to the fore.
'Precarity' has become a term of art in social and cultural criticism, but the angle it brings to the discussion hasn't always been clear. Duvernoy, Olson, and Plass's volume fills readers in on that angle, making a case for attending to representations of the downtrodden more ecumenical than those of only industrial immiseration. Without polemicizing against a Marxist tradition, the volume's essays demonstrate the value of the subjectively and descriptively attuned term 'precarity' for uncovering depictions of personal, contingent, and emotional vulnerabilities often overlooked by normative or teleological approaches. The volume casts new light on canonical as well as neglected works from romanticism and modernism to contemporary film and literature.
In this timely and sorely needed volume, rich historical depth is added to the often all-too-presentist application of 'precarity' to recent works of art, laying bare the deep connection between precarity and discourses on and representations of 'the poor' since 1800. Within a rigorous theoretical framework of critical theory, Marxism, gender theory, and the history of work and labor, these essays explore - via precarity - ongoing dispossessions, forms of subjectivation, and forms of social (non-)relations, bringing agency and utopian desires to the fore.