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Divided nation/s : Germany's partition in American novels / Elisa Edwards.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Edwards, Elisa, author.
Series:
American studies (Munich, Germany) ; Volume 243.
American Studies - A Monograph Series ; Volume 243
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
American literature--German influences.
American literature.
German literature--Appreciation--United States.
German literature.
German literature--Translations into English--History and criticism.
Literature and society--United States.
Literature and society.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (254 p.)
Place of Publication:
Heidelberg, Germany : Universitätsverlag Winter, 2014.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Most American novels set in Germany and published after 1949 take place in West Germany and present it as a 'pars pro toto' for all of Germany, apparently ignoring Germany's partition. However, just when the Wall that divided the two parts of Germany fell, Germany's partition and its repercussions moved into the focus of a number of American novelists. Situated within the realm of Transnational American Studies, this volume presents the first comprehensive study of the different renderings of Germany's partition, the Berlin Wall, and German reunification in American novels published before and
Contents:
Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction: The Long Omission and the Sudden Appearance of the Wall; Part I: Germany's Partition in U.S. American Novels before 1989; Germany's Partition and German-American Relations during the Cold War. A Brief Historical Overview; Germanys Partition in American Genre Fiction, 1949-1989; "The victorious troops of the world's greatest power": Cold War Politics in James McGovern's Romance Novel Fräulein; "East Germany isn't a very nice place": Pro-American Discourses in James McGovern's The Berlin Couriers and James Cross' The Dark Road
Part II: Divided Germany, the Berlin Wall, and German Reunification in U.S. American Novels after 1989The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the Relations Between the US. and Germany after 1989. A Brief Cultural Overview; Cold War Propaganda after the End of the Cold War; "With God [...], one is able to leap over walls": German-American Relations and Christian Bias in Robert Elmer's ""The Wall Series""; Sexual and Gender Ambiguities; "This once-divided city reminds me of myself": Gender Ambiguity in Jeffrey Eugenides' ""Middlesex""
"Apparently this era, which is perhaps really an era of betweenness, is ending": Coming-of-Age and Bisexuality in J. S. Marcus' ""The Captain's Fire""The Treatment of Cultural and Ethnic Others; "Ignorance resultant from a lack of exposure": Racial Tensions, Exclusionary Practices, and Freedom in Paul Beatty's ""Slumberland""; History, Storytelling, and National Narratives; "One nation, still two peoples": National Narratives and Splits in Ward Just's ""The Weather in Berlin""
"It was chaos that brought down the Wall": Chaos Theory and Historical Storytelling in T. Degens' ""Freya on the Wall""The Exile's Question of Home and National (Not)Belongings after 9/11; "Homes are always provisional": Exile Experiences in Chloe Aridjis' Book of Clouds; "It isn't possible to be Jewish and German at the same time": Bi-national Discourses and Place in Anna Winger's This Must Be the Place; Conclusion: Closing the Gap; List of U.S. American Texts about Germany's Partition; Works Cited
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed March 25, 2014).
ISBN:
9783825374228
382537422X

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