2023 (2)
Browsing 2023 (2) by Subject "ddc:800"
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- Article“I hadn’t voted for anyone.” Zur Geste politischer Neutralität als ästhetischer Widerstand bei Bret Easton EllisLiese, Lea (2023) , S. 112-140Using Bret Easton Ellis’ nonfictional book White as an example, this article examines how criticism of liberalism is made plausible by the thesis of a culture war in the polarized U.S. society since the election of Donald Trump. In the U.S., identity politics are blamed for this increasing polarization. Thus, Ellis justifies his departure from liberalism with its supposed transformation into left-wing reactionism that places political correctness above freedom of speech and art. In turn, he stages himself as a neutral observer of political events and justifies his supposed objectivity as a condition for political and aesthetic freedom: he wants to be able to empathize with all points of view and regard them as equal. But in this way, he adopts – whether intentionally or not – narratives that the Alt-Right uses strategically to justify right-wing narratives of conversion and to combat progressive liberalism.
- ArticleJubelräume, Verfolgungsangst, Verdacht – Affektpolitiken des RenegatenKoch, Lars (2023) , S. 34-62This article understands George Orwell’s 1984, Eugen Ruge’s Metropol, and Ralf Rothmann’s Hotel der Schlaflosen as literary investigations of the emotional complexes of the renegade in the context of Stalinism. All three texts, it is argued, bring into focus different aspects of an affect space constituted by a crisis in the epistemology of enmity and a resulting hermeneutics of suspicion. While Orwell is primarily concerned with the mass psychological effects of hate, Ruge is interested in the ubiquity of fear among those who must fear being declared renegades. Rothmann’s short story, in contrast, portrays the subjectivity of an executioner who is capable of mass murder because he operates with absolute moral indifference.
- ArticleKonversionen ins ‘Exil’. Inszenierungen des Übertretens im Umfeld Uwe Tellkamps und des BuchHaus LoschwitzBusch, Nicolai (2023) , S. 86-111The author Uwe Tellkamp is often regarded as a ›political convert‹ who switched from conservative to (new) right-wing positions in 2018. This article first of all discusses media stagings of Tellkamp’s conversion and points to their problems. Based on socio-scientific studies, the article then discusses the relationship between conservatism and right-wing extremism in East Germany and reveals various intersections between the two ideologies, which Tellkamp reproduced long before 2018. Contrary to the assumption of a ›sudden conversion‹, the article shows which strategies of conversion and political immunization Tellkamp and his literary environment in Dresden-Loschwitz have developed for many years. The focus here is on figures of ›inner emigration‹ and ›exile‹, which are interpretated as conversions into imaginary or literary shelters.
- ArticleZur BRD bekehrt. Wolf Biermanns Renegaten-PoetikWagner-Egelhaaf, Martina (2023) , S. 14-33This article examines the interplay of renegade poetics and conversion semantics in Wolf Biermann’s autobiography Warte nicht auf bessre Zeiten (2016). The autobiographical first-person narrator places himself in a line with famous renegades who legitimize his own renegade status. In the process, the concept of the renegade undergoes a rhetorical intensification into a paradox through attributive extension, modeling the courage and truthfulness of the autobiographical self. Staged orality and a colloquial tone assert the authenticity of the self. The liminal figure of the transition from belief in communism and its realization in the GDR to identification with the parliamentary democracy of the Federal Republic is reflected with close reference to the author’s own artistic-literary work. Intertextual references such as the adoption of Heinrich Heine’s poem title »Enfant perdu« for one of his own poems on the flight of Robert Havemann’s son from the Republic make the change of sides a literary motif.