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East, West, and Others by Arlene A. Teraoka

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East, West, and Others

The Third World in Postwar German Literature

Arlene A. Teraoka

Nebraska · Print & ebook · November 1, 1996

Reading lane: German Literary Criticism

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: German Literary Criticism and European Literary Criticism.Publisher: Nebraska.

Book Details

Authors
Arlene A. Teraoka
Publisher
Nebraska
Published
November 1, 1996
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
German Literary Criticism · European Literary Criticism
Reading lane
German Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Literary Criticism

  • German Literary Criticism

About This Book

East, West, and Others is the first work to examine the Third World in German literature from World War II to the present. Arlene A. Teraoka investigates how prominent post–World War II East and West German authors have portrayed the Third World. She discusses the persistent stereotypes of race, culture, and sexuality in texts by authors whose careers were shaped by concerns with Third World politics. Those writers include Anna Seghers, Peter Weiss, Hans Magnus Enzensberger,...

Read full description

East, West, and Others is the first work to examine the Third World in German literature from World War II to the present. Arlene A. Teraoka investigates how prominent post–World War II East and West German authors have portrayed the Third World. She discusses the persistent stereotypes of race, culture, and sexuality in texts by authors whose careers were shaped by concerns with Third World politics. Those writers include Anna Seghers, Peter Weiss, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, and Heiner Müller; East Germans Claus Hammel and Peter Hacks; and the documentary West German writers Max von der Grün, Günter Wallraff, and Paul Geiersbach. Teraoka demonstrates the continuing German need to construct a postwar identity freed from the fascist past and the conflicts and clichés that inevitably mar this dream of the self. Whether authors project a champion of humanity who upholds Enlightenment ideals or a fragmented European protagonist paralyzed by guilt, all negotiate between the forces of rationality and prejudice, universality and difference, solidarity and helplessness.

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