BRECHT'S ACTIVITIES IN THE GDR, THE REGIME'S MARGINALIZING RESPONSE
AND POSTHUMOUS APPROPRIATION OF HIS LEGACY, AND CREATIVE RESPONSES IN
THE GDR AND AFTER.
The avant-garde writer and director Bertolt Brecht left the West for
good in 1949, returning to East Berlin and founding the Berliner
Ensemble. While he quickly became identified internationally as the
cultural figurehead of the young socialist state, his relationship
with the authorities was always complex, and he was increasingly
marginalized by restrictive and authoritarian structures of power. It
was only after his death that the regime sought to elevate him as a
socialist classic - a shift that entailed the selective appropriation
of his legacy and the development of authorized modes of
interpretation and performance. Poets, theorists, dramatists, and
directors soon reacted against what they saw as the stagnation of
Brecht's critical impetus: they began to subject his work to his own
treatment, using his texts as a source of material and taking his
methods to more radical conclusions. _EGYB 5_ explores the multiple,
contradictory impulses behind these broad paradigm shifts and behind
Brecht's activities in the GDR. It investigates the tensions
engendered by his co-option as a socialist classic, and the range of
creative responses his works have inspired, both in the GDR itself and
in reaction to its demise.
Contributors: David Barnett, Laura Bradley, Joy Calico, Paula Hanssen,
Patrick Harkin, Loren Kruger, Karen Leeder, Moray McGowan, Stephen
Parker, David Robb, Erdmut Wizisla. Laura Bradley is Senior Lecturer
in German at the University of Edinburgh. Karen Leeder is Professor of
Modern German Literature and a Fellow of New College, University of
Oxford.
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Brecht and the GDR: Politics, Culture, Posterity
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781571137791
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok