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The Aesthetics of Mythmaking in German Postwar Culture

Autor André Fischer
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 mar 2024
Myths are a central part of our reality. But merely debunking them lets us forget why they are created in the first place and why we need them. André Fischer draws on key examples from German postwar culture, from novelists Hans Henny Jahnn and Hubert Fichte, to sculptor and performance artist Joseph Beuys, and filmmaker Werner Herzog, to show that mythmaking is an indispensable human practice in times of crisis.
Against the background of mythologies based in nineteenth-century romanticism and their ideological continuation in Nazism, fresh forms of mythmaking in the narrative, visual, and performative arts emerged as an aesthetic paradigm in postwar modernism. Boldly rewriting the cultural history of an era and setting in transition, The Aesthetics of Mythmaking in German Postwar Culture counters the predominant narrative of an exclusively rational Vergangenheitsbewältigung (“coming to terms with the past”). Far from being merely reactionary, the turn toward myth offered a dimension of existential orientation that had been neglected by other influential aesthetic paradigms of the postwar period. Fischer’s wide-ranging, transmedia account offers an inclusive perspective on myth beyond storytelling and instead develops mythopoesis as a formal strategy of modernism at large.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780810146686
ISBN-10: 0810146681
Pagini: 298
Ilustrații: 16
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Northwestern University Press

Notă biografică

André Fischer is an assistant professor of German at Washington University in St. Louis 

Recenzii

“Assembling an interdisciplinary cast of mavericks and outsiders, André Fischer presents a singular aesthetic history of postwar German myth. Sophisticated and meticulous, this book makes the long-overdue case for mythopoesis’s role in the post-fascist reorientation of experience and existence that democratic appeals to reason could not deliver entirely.” —Richard Langston, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill