Book Cover
E-book
Author Giblett, Kylie author

Title The version that wanted to be written Writing the Nazi past as historiographic metafiction / Kylie Giblett. Volume 13
Published [s.l.] : Erich Schmidt Verlag, 2021

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Description 1 online resource (210 p.)
Series Transpositionen/Transpositions
Transpositionen/Transpositions
Contents No German identity without Auschwitz: Germans as perpetrators, Germans as victims, and the disrupting impact of historiographic metafiction -- If they were all monsters: the SS perpetrator Hanna Schmitz in Bernhard Schlink's Der Vorleser -- Where did all the murderers go? Germans as victims (?) in Ulla Hahn's Unscharfe Bilder -- Transformation work: viewing the Nazi past through the third generation prism in Tanja Dücker's Himmelskörper -- Every witness is a false witness: looking through the eyes of a perpetrator in Marcel Beyer's Flughunde -- The version that wanted to be written: historiographic metafiction and the perpetrator/victim dichotomy
Summary The unification of Germany in 1990 set in train a number of dramatic changes in Germany's political, social and cultural landscape which gave rise to a series of hotly debated memory contests centred on the newly unified nation's approach to its common Nazi past. As an important medium of cultural memory, literature played a significant part in the controversy and novels dealing with the Nazi past enjoyed widespread popularity and influence in the 20 years following 1990. But what ""version"" of the Nazi past did the authors of these novels choose to tell? Using the perpetrator/victim dichotomy around which much of the debate crystallised, this book seeks to answer this question via a close textual analysis of works by Bernhard Schlink, Ulla Hahn, Tanja Dückers, and Marcel Beyer. In particular, this book analyses these novels as historiographic metafiction, a significantly under-explored angle which raises important questions concerning our ability to know the "truth" about the past and destabilises the basis on which we judge guilt or innocence. In providing a deeper understanding of the approach of fiction authors to the Nazi past in the post-1990 period, this book aims to enrich our understanding of its legacy in contemporary German society today
Notes Description based on print version record
Subject History.
history (discipline)
History / Holocaust.
History
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9783503195251
3503195254