[O]ffers a highly convincing and much-needed insight into the context in which better- and lesser-known authors in East(ern) Germany worked.

MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW

Brockmann impresses with the density and depth of his analyses, illuminating in new ways the complex cultural-political fabric of the postwar years. . . . [A] major contribution to GDR and postwar scholarship.

GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW

[N]ot just suspenseful to read and impressive due to its wealth of new material and ideas, but it is also a central study, particularly because of its success in demonstrating the necessity for and productivity of reexamining views that became dominant in the 1990s.

WEIMARER BEITRÄGE

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This book represents an important resource for scholars working on East German literature and its relation to historical and political events in the immediate post-war period.

FORUM FOR MODERN LANGUAGE STUDIES

Brockmann's study lucidly demonstrates that East German literary culture in the 1940s and 50s was indeed full of public discussion about the direction of East German literature and that writers' voices were raised and heard. . . . Brockmann's contention that GDR literature was always offering a thorough treatment of the fallout of Nazism and the Holocaust is utterly compelling. . . . a study that will be necessary reading for future research that looks to the East German literary culture of this period . . . .

JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN STUDIES

[This] book is the best work in English to date on the role of intellectuals in the first decade and half of the GDR.

CHOICE

The value of the study lies above all in its feat of synthesis. It concentrates on a period whose analysis has not yet been undertaken with this level of thoroughness. . . . A consistently exciting read. . . .

ZEITSCHRIFT FÜR GERMANISTIK

This book is a must for anyone who wants to dig deeper into the complexity of early East German culture and to gain a better understanding of how intellectual and literary endeavor . . . became the vital cornerstone of a 'writers' state.

BRECHT YEARBOOK

Offers a much-needed look at the context in which authors in East(ern) Germany lived and worked-and at their 'state' of mind-in the early post-war years. . . . Brockmann's impressive breadth of knowledge and clear writing style make this book an invaluable contribution for scholars and students alike.

MONATSHEFTE

Overall, Brockmann's study is an impressively multilayered and, in its multiperspectival method, impressively insightful account of early GDR literature. It positions itself resolutely against a careless forgetting of history in the literary study of the two Germanys.

- Franz Fromholzer, PHILOLOGIE IM NETZ

Examines the literature produced from the very beginnings of what became the GDR through the 1950s, redressing a tendency of literary scholarship to focus on the later GDR. Twenty-five years after the demise of the German Democratic Republic, there is perhaps more scholarship being produced on all aspects of that country than ever. This is true also in the field of literary studies, but especially inEnglish-language literary scholarship there has been a strong imbalance toward a focus on the last three decades of GDR literature. The literature of the earlier GDR has mostly been dismissed or ignored by scholars, as the discontinuities between the early and late GDR have been emphasized over the considerable continuities. This book seeks to redress that state of affairs, examining the literature produced from the very beginnings of what became the GDRthrough the 1950s. In doing so it applies to GDR literature the insight gained by scholars over the past few decades that the immediate postwar period was more complex, more meaningful, and more rewarding of study than it was longdeemed to be. Far from all being mere propaganda or rote socialist realism, the literature of the early GDR has much to tell us about the budding socialist state, even as it goes far in explaining the developments in the later GDR.
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Examines the literature produced from the very beginnings of what became the GDR through the 1950s, redressing a tendency of literary scholarship to focus on the later GDR.
Introduction: Reconstructing East German Literature In the Zone, 1945 Brecht and the Battle of the Spirits, 1949 German Culture's Will to Power, 1949-50 Fascinating Fascists, 1949-50 Typical Heroes, 1951-53 The Danger of Optimism, 1953 The Worst of Times, 1956-58 Literature for Adults, 1956-59 Conclusion Selected Bibliography Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781571139535
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Vekt
710 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
380

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

STEPHEN BROCKMANN is Professor of German with courtesy appointments in English and History at Carnegie Mellon University.