Description

Book Synopsis
Shows how postwar writers in Austria and Yugoslavia re-imagined the concept of Mitteleuropa, Central Europe, as a cultural space between nostalgia and totalitarianism. The German term Mitteleuropa, or Central Europe, was never just a geographical concept: it connoted extending German influence to the east. In the 1980s, the eastern European dissident writers György Konrád, Czesław Miłosz, and Milan Kundera revived the concept to counter a perceived Cold War memory vacuum, aligning themselves with the multiethnic and multilingual legacy of the Habsburg Empire. Their observations gave rise to a protracted public debate that posited literature against politics. This debate was both anticipated and expanded upon in postwar literary works by Ingeborg Bachmann, Peter Handke, and Christoph Ransmayr in Austria, and Danilo Kiš, Aleksandar Tišma, and Dubravka Ugrešić in (the former) Yugoslavia, all of whom questioned notions of geographic identity and national allegiance by imagining Mitteleuropa as a cultural space between nostalgia and totalitarianism. Yvonne Zivkovic draws on space and memory studies to show how Mitteleuropa emerged as an alternate memory discourse that reveals deep ties between the Second Austrian Republic and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The writers discussed address the major themes of the 1980s debate - traumatic memory, geographic displacement, and transnationalism - but also share a literary aesthetics that privileges the intersections of prose fiction and the essay, the literary fragment, and intertextuality. Zivkovic's book shows the persistence of Mitteleuropa as a literary network and as a cultural collective that examines civic values against public tendencies of memory manipulation.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Abbreviations and Note on Translations Introduction: Mitteleuropa as a Transnational Memory Discourse The Legacy of Mitteleuropa: Between Geopolitics and Geopoetics Ingeborg Bachmann and Peter Handke: The Austrian Periphery and Mitteleuropa Mitteleuropa as Conflicted Community in the Writings of Danilo Kis and Aleksandar Tisma Mitteleuropa after 1989. New Memory Challenges in Christoph Ransmayr and Dubravka Ugresi? Conclusion: Mitteleuropa Literature in the 21st Century: Revisiting the Promise of Border-Crossing Bibliography Index

The Literary Politics of Mitteleuropa:

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    A Hardback by Yvonne Zivkovic

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      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 15/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9781640140882, 978-1640140882
      ISBN10: 1640140883

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Shows how postwar writers in Austria and Yugoslavia re-imagined the concept of Mitteleuropa, Central Europe, as a cultural space between nostalgia and totalitarianism. The German term Mitteleuropa, or Central Europe, was never just a geographical concept: it connoted extending German influence to the east. In the 1980s, the eastern European dissident writers György Konrád, Czesław Miłosz, and Milan Kundera revived the concept to counter a perceived Cold War memory vacuum, aligning themselves with the multiethnic and multilingual legacy of the Habsburg Empire. Their observations gave rise to a protracted public debate that posited literature against politics. This debate was both anticipated and expanded upon in postwar literary works by Ingeborg Bachmann, Peter Handke, and Christoph Ransmayr in Austria, and Danilo Kiš, Aleksandar Tišma, and Dubravka Ugrešić in (the former) Yugoslavia, all of whom questioned notions of geographic identity and national allegiance by imagining Mitteleuropa as a cultural space between nostalgia and totalitarianism. Yvonne Zivkovic draws on space and memory studies to show how Mitteleuropa emerged as an alternate memory discourse that reveals deep ties between the Second Austrian Republic and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The writers discussed address the major themes of the 1980s debate - traumatic memory, geographic displacement, and transnationalism - but also share a literary aesthetics that privileges the intersections of prose fiction and the essay, the literary fragment, and intertextuality. Zivkovic's book shows the persistence of Mitteleuropa as a literary network and as a cultural collective that examines civic values against public tendencies of memory manipulation.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Abbreviations and Note on Translations Introduction: Mitteleuropa as a Transnational Memory Discourse The Legacy of Mitteleuropa: Between Geopolitics and Geopoetics Ingeborg Bachmann and Peter Handke: The Austrian Periphery and Mitteleuropa Mitteleuropa as Conflicted Community in the Writings of Danilo Kis and Aleksandar Tisma Mitteleuropa after 1989. New Memory Challenges in Christoph Ransmayr and Dubravka Ugresi? Conclusion: Mitteleuropa Literature in the 21st Century: Revisiting the Promise of Border-Crossing Bibliography Index

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