TAKES THE RECENT WAVE OF GERMAN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL WRITING ON ILLNESS
AND DISABILITY SERIOUSLY AS LITERATURE, DEMONSTRATING THE VALUE OF A
LITERARY DISABILITY STUDIES APPROACH.
In the German-speaking world there has been a new wave - intensifying
since 2007 - of autobiographically inspired writing on illness and
disability, death and dying. Nina Schmidt's book takes this writing
seriously as literature,examining how the authors of such personal
narratives come to write of their experiences between the poles of
cliché and exceptionality. Identifying shortcomings in the approaches
taken thus far to such texts, she makes suggestions as to how to
better read their narratives from the stance of literary scholarship,
then demonstrates the value of a literary disability studies approach
to such writing with close readings of Charlotte Roche's
_Schoßgebete_(2011), Kathrin Schmidt's _Du stirbst nicht_ (2009),
Verena Stefan's _Fremdschläfer_ (2007), and - in the final,
comparative chapter - Christoph Schlingensief's _So schön wie hier
kanns im Himmel gar nicht sein! Tagebuch einer Krebserkrankung_ (2009)
and Wolfgang Herrndorf's blog-cum-book _Arbeit und Struktur_
(2010-13). Schmidt shows that authors dealing with illness and
disability do so with an awareness of their precarious subject
position in the public eye, a position they negotiate creatively.
Writing the liminal experience of serious illness along the borders of
genre, moving between fictional and autobiographical modes, they carve
out spaces from which they speak up and share their personal stories
in the realm of literature, to political ends.
Nina Schmidt is a postdoctoral researcher in the Friedrich Schlegel
Graduate School of Literary Studies at the Freie Universität Berlin.
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Writing Illness in Twenty-First-Century German Literature
Product details
ISBN
9781787442870
Published
2020
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author