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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_1032424052
    Umfang: 411 Seiten , 22 cm
    ISBN: 9783958902343 , 3958902340
    Inhalt: In seinem Buch widmet sich Raymond Unger - selbst vom transgenerationalen Trauma betroffen - erneut den Auswirkungen nicht verarbeiteter Kriegstraumata auf die nachfolgenden Generationen. Im Mittelpunkt stehen dabei die Babyboomer-Eliten, die aufgrund fehlender persönlicher Reife und nicht verarbeiteter Schuld-und Sühne-Komplexe mit ihren Entscheidungen die Gesellschaft polarisieren und den sozialen Frieden gefährden. Ausserdem spürt er den Ursachen für den dramatischen Rückbau mühsam errungener Freiheiten in Kunst, Kultur und Medienlandschaften und für das Wiedererstarken von überwunden geglaubten, religiös fundamentalen Orientierungen nach, die zunehmend gesellschaftliche Akzeptanz gewinnen. (Verlagstext)
    Anmerkung: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 394 - 412
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Unger, Raymond Die Wiedergutmacher München : Europa Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, 2018
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Schlagwort(e): Deutschland ; Zweiter Weltkrieg ; Generation 3 ; Kollektives Gedächtnis ; Vergangenheitsbewältigung ; Politische Einstellung ; Flüchtlingspolitik ; Geschichte 2015 ; Deutschland ; Vergangenheitsbewältigung ; Migration ; Political Correctness ; Islam ; Die Linke
    Mehr zum Autor: Unger, Raymond 1963-
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1858906792
    Umfang: 1 online resource
    ISBN: 9781000827989 , 1000827984 , 9781032130323 , 1032130326 , 9781000827873 , 1000827879
    Serie: Routledge studies in contemporary literature
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 1032424052
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 9781032424057
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 1032424052
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9949435672202882
    Umfang: 1 online resource
    ISBN: 9781000827989 , 1000827984 , 9781032130323 , 1032130326 , 9781000827873 , 1000827879
    Serie: Routledge studies in contemporary literature
    Inhalt: Representing Vulnerabilities in Contemporary Literature includes a collection of essays exploring the ways in which recent literary representations of vulnerability may problematize its visibilization from an ethical and aesthetic perspective. Recent technological and scientific developments have accentuated human vulnerability in many and different ways at a cross-national, and even cross-species level. Disability, technological, and ecological vulnerabilities are new foci of interest that add up to gender, precarity and trauma, among others, as forms of vulnerability in this volume. The literary visualization of these vulnerabilities might help raise social awareness of one's own vulnerabilities as well as those of others so as to bring about global solidarity based on affinity and affect. However, the literary representation of forms of vulnerability might also deepen stigmatization phenomena and trivialize the spectacularization of vulnerability by blunting readers' affective response towards those products that strive to hold their attention and interest in an information-saturated, global entertainment market.
    Weitere Ausg.: Print version: ISBN 1032424052
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 9781032424057
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1877772119
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (16 p.)
    ISBN: 9781032130316 , 9781032424057
    Inhalt: This chapter draws on Judith Butler’s (2009) theorization on the uneven distribution of grievability and Achille Mbembe’s (2003) notion of necropolitics to explain different forms of subjugation to the power of death and mourning in contexts where citizens are deprived of their rights and transformed into trespassers. Theresa May’s policy of stripping terror suspects of their British citizenship is one of such contexts inspiring Kamila Shamsie’s Home Fire (2017), written in a context of Islamophobia and oppressive counter-terror politics. The chapter explores the writer’s challenge to utopian discourses on cosmopolitanism and border-crossing through her depiction of characters subjected to legal ambiguity and statelessness. Yet, it proposes that Shamsie’s postcolonial rewriting of Sophocles’s Antigone be understood in light of Butler’s (2016) rethinking of vulnerability and resistance, as it is precisely through the invocation of this rebellious figure that patronizing discourses defining the vulnerable subject (identified in the novel as female, Muslim, and immigrant) can be dismantled. Contesting orientalist and masculinist assumptions, Home Fire opens up new configurations of racialized and gendered vulnerabilities defying the dominant hierarchies of corporeal value that this chapter examines by focusing on Shamsie’s enactment of embodied interventions, transgressive expressions of mourning, and different forms of resistance to institutional violence
    Anmerkung: English
    Sprache: Unbestimmte Sprache
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1877772461
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (16 p.)
    ISBN: 9781032130316 , 9781032424057
    Inhalt: Tabish Khair’s Just Another Jihadi Jane (2014) explores the global phenomenon of female suicide bombers after the emergence of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and the international reconfiguration of geopolitical power after 9/11. Khair tells the story of Jamilla and Ameena, two British teenage girls of South Asian Muslim descent who decide to join Islamic State in their search for their religious ideal of Islamic truth and their impending need for belonging and recognition. This chapter analyzes the multi-dimensional complexity of vulnerability exposed both in the story thematization and in the narrative mode of fictional testimony (Ganteau 2015). Firstly, it describes the story emplotment vertebrated along two different axes: the socioeconomic and cultural context that articulates vulnerability as precarity (Butler 2004; 2009) and the conditions of the precariat (Standing 2011); and female vulnerability to oppression and patriarchal violence after the girls move to Syria. Secondly, this chapter investigates the materiality of the narrative medium of fictional testimony as a precarious yet creative vehicle to expose vulnerability. Ultimately, this chapter contends that Khair’s story and narrative form particularize the stereotyped jihadi Jane, shattering to pieces the sociopolitical ungrievability imposed on their différance (Derrida 1968) and their wasted lives (Bauman 2004)
    Anmerkung: English
    Sprache: Unbestimmte Sprache
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 6
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : Taylor & Francis
    UID:
    gbv_1877774596
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (16 p.)
    ISBN: 9781032130316 , 9781032424057
    Inhalt: Jennifer Egan’s Manhattan Beach (2017) narrates the misadventures of young Irish Catholic Anna Kerrigan in her pursuit of a diving career in the New York docks during WWII. These misadventures are heavily conditioned by the accumulation of a series of structural vulnerabilities intersecting class, gender, religion, immigration, and disability, as well as political and economic corruption, which are emphasized against the backdrop of an impossible American Dream. The structural oppressions visibilized by Egan in this novel will thus serve to reflect on how the purported national invulnerability underlying USA’s imperialism in the second half of the 20th century was in fact based on obscuring national vulnerabilities that strongly resonate at the beginning of the new millennium. This chapter explores Egan’s formal experimentation with historical fiction as a calculated risk that draws its narrative strengths from the spectacularization of vulnerability while exposing the novel’s formal belatedness as a case of vulnerable narrative
    Anmerkung: English
    Sprache: Unbestimmte Sprache
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 7
    UID:
    edoccha_9961382298202883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (202 pages)
    ISBN: 1-03-213032-6 , 1-000-82787-9 , 1-000-82798-4
    Serie: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature
    Inhalt: Representing Vulnerabilities in Contemporary Literature includes a collection of essays exploring the ways in which recent literary representations of vulnerability may problematize its visibilization from an ethical and aesthetic perspective. Recent technological and scientific developments have accentuated human vulnerability in many and different ways at a cross-national, and even cross-species level. Disability, technological, and ecological vulnerabilities are new foci of interest that add up to gender, precarity and trauma, among others, as forms of vulnerability in this volume. The literary visualization of these vulnerabilities might help raise social awareness of one's own vulnerabilities as well as those of others so as to bring about global solidarity based on affinity and affect. However, the literary representation of forms of vulnerability might also deepen stigmatization phenomena and trivialize the spectacularization of vulnerability by blunting readers' affective response towards those products that strive to hold their attention and interest in an information-saturated, global entertainment market.
    Anmerkung: Includes index. , Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Tables -- Preface -- List of Contributors -- Introduction: Current Literary Representations of Vulnerability. Ethical and Aesthetic Concerns -- Introduction: Vulnerability as an Academic Conundrum -- Literary Representations of Vulnerabilities: A Short Appraisal -- The Volume Representing Vulnerabilities in Contemporary Literature -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 1: Precarity and the Global Dispossession of Indigeneity through Representations of Disability -- Introduction: Indigenous Models of Precarious Embodiment under American Colonialism -- Colonialism's Rapacious Bodily Intimacies -- Non-Human Animal Holocausts -- "Our Profession is to Make Holocausts:" Collecting the Survivors and Recording the Dead -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 2: Performing Ceremony: Healing, Empowering, Re-Writing History in Alexis P. Gumbs' Dub (2020) -- Introduction -- Performing Ceremony -- Reading Dub: Vulnerability, Memorialization, and the Way to Healing -- Empowering: Why Sylvia Wynter's Thinking as Frame and Companion? -- Re-writing, Dubbing History -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 3: The Visibility of Embeddings: Materiality, Vulnerability, and Care in Cynan Jones's The Long Dry (2006) -- Introduction -- Illness, Toxicity, and Accident -- Vibrant Materiality -- Relationality and Care -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter 4: Pretty Dolls Don't Play Dice: The Calculated Vulnerabilities of Jennifer Egan's Manhattan Beach (2017) -- Introduction -- Human Vulnerability as Narrative Prosthesis -- The Vulnerable Text as a Calculated Risk -- Acknowledgments -- Works Cited -- Chapter 5: Wolves, Bees, and Roaches: On the Nexus between Cultural Production and the Vulnerability of Humans and Non-Human Species. , Introduction -- Wolves -- Bees -- Cockroaches -- Conclusion -- Works Cited -- Chapter 6: "The Ones We Love Are Enemies of the State": Mourners and Trespassers in Kamila Shamsie's Home Fire (2017) -- (In)visible Women at the Border -- Googling while Muslim: Mourning while Trespassing -- Conclusion: Toward Vulnerability in Resistance -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 7: Mapping Contemporary Hell: Vulnerability, Social Invisibility, and Spectral Mourning in Jon McGregor's Even the Dogs (2010) -- Introduction: The Post-Industrial City as Hell and the Derealization of the Ungrievable Other in Even the Dogs -- Narrative Voice and Spectral Mourning in Even the Dogs -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 8: The Logics of Vulnerability: Challenging the Ungrievable Différance of the Other in Tabish Khair's Just Another Jihadi Jane (2016) -- Introduction -- Vulnerability in the Binary Emplotment of Just Another Jihadi Jane -- Material Vulnerability of the Novel -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Works Cited -- Chapter 9: Technological Vulnerability in the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Don DeLillo's The Silence (2020) -- Introduction -- Technology Dependence and the Fourth Industrial Revolution -- Technology and Vulnerability -- The Silence: Posthuman Suffering and Datafication -- The Silence: Melancholia and the Loss of the Self -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Works Cited -- Chapter 10: When Immortality Becomes a Burden: Transhuman Vulnerability and Self-Consciousness in William Gibson's Neuromancer (1984) -- Dystopia, Cyborgs, and Transportable Human Consciousness -- From Empowerment to Vulnerability: Testing Transhuman Grounds and the Power of the Mind -- Numbness, Transhumanism, and Intertextual Dixie -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Note -- Works Cited. , Chapter 11: Vulnerability and Risk in Larissa Lai's Critical Dystopias -- Introduction -- Risk and Vulnerability in a Wounded World -- Larissa Lai's Post-anthropocentric Feminist Critical Dystopias -- The Anthropocene in Fiction -- Environmental Vulnerability -- The Less-than-Human Other -- Open Endings, More than Human -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index.
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 1-03-242405-2
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 1-03-213031-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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  • 8
    UID:
    edocfu_9961382298202883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (202 pages)
    ISBN: 1-03-213032-6 , 1-000-82787-9 , 1-000-82798-4
    Serie: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Literature
    Inhalt: Representing Vulnerabilities in Contemporary Literature includes a collection of essays exploring the ways in which recent literary representations of vulnerability may problematize its visibilization from an ethical and aesthetic perspective. Recent technological and scientific developments have accentuated human vulnerability in many and different ways at a cross-national, and even cross-species level. Disability, technological, and ecological vulnerabilities are new foci of interest that add up to gender, precarity and trauma, among others, as forms of vulnerability in this volume. The literary visualization of these vulnerabilities might help raise social awareness of one's own vulnerabilities as well as those of others so as to bring about global solidarity based on affinity and affect. However, the literary representation of forms of vulnerability might also deepen stigmatization phenomena and trivialize the spectacularization of vulnerability by blunting readers' affective response towards those products that strive to hold their attention and interest in an information-saturated, global entertainment market.
    Anmerkung: Includes index. , Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Tables -- Preface -- List of Contributors -- Introduction: Current Literary Representations of Vulnerability. Ethical and Aesthetic Concerns -- Introduction: Vulnerability as an Academic Conundrum -- Literary Representations of Vulnerabilities: A Short Appraisal -- The Volume Representing Vulnerabilities in Contemporary Literature -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 1: Precarity and the Global Dispossession of Indigeneity through Representations of Disability -- Introduction: Indigenous Models of Precarious Embodiment under American Colonialism -- Colonialism's Rapacious Bodily Intimacies -- Non-Human Animal Holocausts -- "Our Profession is to Make Holocausts:" Collecting the Survivors and Recording the Dead -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 2: Performing Ceremony: Healing, Empowering, Re-Writing History in Alexis P. Gumbs' Dub (2020) -- Introduction -- Performing Ceremony -- Reading Dub: Vulnerability, Memorialization, and the Way to Healing -- Empowering: Why Sylvia Wynter's Thinking as Frame and Companion? -- Re-writing, Dubbing History -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 3: The Visibility of Embeddings: Materiality, Vulnerability, and Care in Cynan Jones's The Long Dry (2006) -- Introduction -- Illness, Toxicity, and Accident -- Vibrant Materiality -- Relationality and Care -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter 4: Pretty Dolls Don't Play Dice: The Calculated Vulnerabilities of Jennifer Egan's Manhattan Beach (2017) -- Introduction -- Human Vulnerability as Narrative Prosthesis -- The Vulnerable Text as a Calculated Risk -- Acknowledgments -- Works Cited -- Chapter 5: Wolves, Bees, and Roaches: On the Nexus between Cultural Production and the Vulnerability of Humans and Non-Human Species. , Introduction -- Wolves -- Bees -- Cockroaches -- Conclusion -- Works Cited -- Chapter 6: "The Ones We Love Are Enemies of the State": Mourners and Trespassers in Kamila Shamsie's Home Fire (2017) -- (In)visible Women at the Border -- Googling while Muslim: Mourning while Trespassing -- Conclusion: Toward Vulnerability in Resistance -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 7: Mapping Contemporary Hell: Vulnerability, Social Invisibility, and Spectral Mourning in Jon McGregor's Even the Dogs (2010) -- Introduction: The Post-Industrial City as Hell and the Derealization of the Ungrievable Other in Even the Dogs -- Narrative Voice and Spectral Mourning in Even the Dogs -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter 8: The Logics of Vulnerability: Challenging the Ungrievable Différance of the Other in Tabish Khair's Just Another Jihadi Jane (2016) -- Introduction -- Vulnerability in the Binary Emplotment of Just Another Jihadi Jane -- Material Vulnerability of the Novel -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Works Cited -- Chapter 9: Technological Vulnerability in the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Don DeLillo's The Silence (2020) -- Introduction -- Technology Dependence and the Fourth Industrial Revolution -- Technology and Vulnerability -- The Silence: Posthuman Suffering and Datafication -- The Silence: Melancholia and the Loss of the Self -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Works Cited -- Chapter 10: When Immortality Becomes a Burden: Transhuman Vulnerability and Self-Consciousness in William Gibson's Neuromancer (1984) -- Dystopia, Cyborgs, and Transportable Human Consciousness -- From Empowerment to Vulnerability: Testing Transhuman Grounds and the Power of the Mind -- Numbness, Transhumanism, and Intertextual Dixie -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Note -- Works Cited. , Chapter 11: Vulnerability and Risk in Larissa Lai's Critical Dystopias -- Introduction -- Risk and Vulnerability in a Wounded World -- Larissa Lai's Post-anthropocentric Feminist Critical Dystopias -- The Anthropocene in Fiction -- Environmental Vulnerability -- The Less-than-Human Other -- Open Endings, More than Human -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index.
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 1-03-242405-2
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 1-03-213031-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
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