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Gespräche mit Gott über Geld (Der Geist des Geldes 1) (German Edition)

Parteiarbeiter an der historischen Front: Heidelberger Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, N.


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Die vertriebenen Heidelberger Dozenten. Dokumente zu ihrer Geschichte Stuttgart Steine. Aspekte seines Werkes Braunschweig Vieweg Karlova v Praze Wir sind in die Irre gegangen. Adolf Erman — in seiner Zeit Berlin [u. November bis 2. XIV Herzberg XVII Herzeberg Reich und der Tod seines Kollegen Norbert Jokl http: Die Geschichte einer Universitatsstadt. Von der preusischen Mittelstadt zur sudniedersachsischen Grosstadt bis Hg.

Maria Leidorf http: VIII Herzberg Nachrichten von Vater und Mutter: Fischer unter Mitarbeit von R. IV Herzberg Widerstand in Berlin gegen das NS-Regime bis Ein biographisches Lexikon — Berlin Trafo Hg. Lundgreen Wissenschaft im Dritten Reich 9. Zur engeren Thematik der Geisteswissenschaften im Nationalsozialismus s. Wiemers und Fischer Die Mitglieder von bis Jansen Professoren und Politik Wald Nachrichten von Vater und Mutter ; Anon. Brentjes Wissenschaft unter dem NS-Regime Stuchlik Der arische Ansatz Leider sind nach Auskunft von Dr. Breasted Pioneer to the Past Kowalczuk Legitimation eines neuen Staates Parak Hochschule und Wissenschaft in zwei deutschen Diktaturen Wilhelm Die Diktatur und die evangelische Kirche Hanisch Die Nachfolger der Exegeten Dieselbe Information hat mir Henri C.

Seit Ende September If you had a personal account on the old platform, click here. Librarian administrators click here. Have an Access Token? Enter your access token to activate and access content online. Please login and go to your personal user account to enter your access token. Access content through your institution. Any other coaching guidance? Abstract The history of Egyptology in the Third Reich has never been the subject of academic analysis.

Sections Abstract Inhalt 1. Comedian Harmonists [The Harmonists].

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Ehe im Schatten [Marriage in the Shadows]. Hitlerjunge Salomon [Europa, Europa]. Warner Home Video Germany, Katja Riemann and Maria Schrader. Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe Bassewitz, Heike von, ed. Zentralwohlfahrtsstelle der Juden in Deutschland e. Der Esel Des Propheten. Laughter and the Sense of Humor. Spiegel Online International 25 Jan. The Movie Review Show. Essays on Jewish Humor. Wayne State UP, What is a Jewish Joke?: An Excursion into Jewish Humor.

The Joke and Its Relation to the Unconscious. The Jewish Element in American Humor. An Annual on Jewish Themes. Murray Mindlin and Chaim Bermant. Graham, Benjamin, and David L. Mendel and Martin Grotjahn. Wolfgang Preisendanz and Rainer Warning. Jewish Life in Germany. English Humour for Beginners. Amsterdam and Atlanta, GA: Jewish Humor — A Survey and a Program. Characteristics of Jewish Humor. Anat Zajdman and Avner Ziv. The Schlemiel as Metaphor: Studies in the Yiddish and American Jewish Novel.

Justin Cyril Bertrand Gosling. Da lacht des Rabbis Herz: Let there be laughter!: Jewish Humor in America. Rosten, Leo Calvin, and Lawrence Bush. The New Joys of Yiddish. The World as Will and Idea. Richard Burdon Haldane and John Kemp. Classic Jewish Humor in America. German Literature of the s and Beyond: The Schlemiel as Modern Hero.

U of Chicago P, Zajdman, Anat, and Avner Ziv, eds. Dabei benutzt die Kunst zwei Kunstgriffe: Immediately following the opening of the border between East and West Germany the desire to abolish all symbols of the forced separation was overwhelming. The photographs provide insights into the daily life of GDR citizens and include a series of long-term portraits depicting children during the s in the GDR and accompanying their arrival into a new society after the upheaval Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, 14 Aug. Anne Hector 79 humans had started was taken over by natural forces, and Mother Nature reasserted her dominion over politics, replacing the man-made border with wetlands and wildlife.

At the same time, substantial efforts were made, especially in Berlin, to preserve collective memories of East German history: Many books have also been written by and about those who lived in the GDR, and this terrain is not the sole prerogative of humor and satire—the dialogue is ongoing. However, in a parallel process that mimics Mother Nature, to some extent forty years of East German culture is being distorted and covered up as biting satire, demeaning humor, and tawdry memorializing take their toll, eating away at the memories of those who grew up there. I intend to show that this erosion is the socioliterary equivalent of Mother Nature transforming the landscape, turning now fossilized memories into grotesque aberrations.

Myths and legends can serve as means to convey a critical distance from events and experiences and prolong their reification as art. The reader identifies with such scenes as they emerge from the felt and lived experience of East German and Soviet citizens, despite their grotesque distortion of this experience. Although former citizens of the GDR and the USSR can identify with these scenes more easily than others who did not experience such systems firsthand, all readers are provided easy access to 3 The former detainee, Carl-Wolfgang Holzapfel, planned his return to the prison cell as part of a live art project with the artist Franziska Vu.

Most scenes also provide a critical counterpoint from which postwall society can be evaluated. Jakob Hein and Wladimir Kaminer: Brief Backgrounds Hein b. While other writers also read at public gatherings, for Hein and Kaminer reading and performing are linked: He became known widely in Germany after his semi- autobiographical vignette collection recording his memories of East Germany, Mein erstes T-Shirt, was published in Other group members have also made a name for themselves outside the group. Anne Hector 81 music and shows geared toward immigrants and xenophilic Germans from until He, too, though not born in Berlin, has lived there since His views of the city—including its food, the Berlin dialect, as well as German culture in general—have been shaped by his position as an immigrant.

Here, as in his other books, Kaminer displays his now famous ability to create puns and wordplays, mixing descriptions of awkward and humorous incidents with historical facts about Berlin as a reinvigorated center of fashion and culture. They thus provide an ambiguous camouflage for the scar left by the Wall: The Grotesque and the Rhetorics of Play Methods for creating humor include the carnivalesque as put forward by Mikhail Bakhtin and the grotesque as outlined by Geoffrey Harpham.

Bakhtin defines the carnival as a social institution and the carnivalesque as a method in literature of depicting a time when the ordinary rules of society and culture are in abeyance and there is a flattening or reversal of the social hierarchy, creating the potential for the masses to criticize the authorities Bakhtin Grotesque configurations of the physical body 5 The radio show was shut down by the RBB on December 31, , because of a lack of funding; however, it continues to be broadcast on the Internet under the name Radio multicult2.

Harpham sees the grotesque as a gross exaggeration that holds onto some aspects of reality, but allows familiar and unfamiliar objects to intermingle Harpham 5. Although the unfamiliar paints a gloss over the familiar, the two together transcend the sum of their parts and create a new, independent entity. The carnivalesque and grotesque modes provide a basic strategy of humor that appears simple on the surface: Because this defamiliarization makes a person, object, or institution appear new or different, it can thus cause us to laugh: In fact, it is talismanic of their brand of humor.

Often this playfulness also serves to convey grotesquerie, rebellion against authority, or satirical criticism. As the term is used here, the rhetorics of play express the way play is placed in context within broader value systems, which are assumed by the theorists of play rather than studied directly by them. The seven rhetorics he delineates are the rhetoric of play as progress, as fate, as power, as identity, as the imaginary, and as frivolous, as well as the rhetoric of the self.

All furthermore contribute to producing defamiliarization. The first of these three rhetorics highlights identity as a rhetoric of play: This identity- forming rhetoric, displayed during carnivals, group rituals, and festivals, reaffirms existing affiliations and differentiates one group from all others. In the texts by Hein and Kaminer discussed here, identity is constantly under assault. Who or what is German? Who or what is Self, who is the Other?

Their game-like constructions are playful and amusing, often containing fantastical and untrue segments, but they also set up situations that provoke serious reflection regarding the characteristics that make up German identity. Play can have many different applications, but art and literature showcase it as a major instigator of creativity. Frivolity is the third rhetoric utilized in this chapter: The rhetoric of play as frivolous […] is usually applied to the activities of the idle or the foolish.

But frivolity, as used here, is not just the puritanic negative, it is also a term to be applied more to historical trickster figures and fools, who were once the central and carnivalesque persons who enacted playful protest against the orders of the ordained world. Hein purports to take the reader on a tour through the mythology associated with East Germany. In his texts the formerly oppressed get a chance to speak up and find vindication by criticizing the authorities without being punished for it, a benefit that Bakhtin associates with the carnivalesque Bakhtin It is a fact that drivers had to use a GDR highway to get to their destination in the West; however, Hein invents imaginary clauses to his law, one of which stipulates that people found wandering on the berm should automatically be considered GDR citizens and treated as such.

Humor here comes in the guise of absurdity; it is used to stop the action for a moment to give the reader a chance to think. Stopping the forward action and presenting a distorted, funhouse mirror of the world are means Hein uses to produce defamiliarization so that his readers come to see objects in unfamiliar formats.

Instead, Hein focuses entirely on the difficulties the boy encounters in adjusting to his new life in the East. He is adopted immediately, but his East German parents struggle to fulfill his consumer demands. Note in the following passage how an exaggeration that mixes the familiar with the unfamiliar is built on a premise based in reality: The parents cannot deal with a child socialized in the West. Hein describes this incident and its consequences with an objective tone, although, had they been experienced in real life, they would have been traumatic. Not surprisingly, these differences have dominated public and private discussions since unification.

After this failed experiment, Holger was reunited with his parents in the FRG. Did Holger remain single because of his childhood trauma? We will never know. Ambiguity is the result of this mixing of modes. Although we are presented with real memories, their scars are disappearing from view. Against the backdrop of what appears to be an amusement park, the two adoptive parents stand with obligatory smiles on their faces, while the child in the middle maintains a bemused expression. The shot captures a moment of forced togetherness that appears ironic in the context of what should have been experienced by participants as a happy outing.

This time, a group of acting students is required to work in factories to learn about the everyday life of the working class He suggests that budding actors, and not writers, accompany the workers and study them to be able to portray them properly on stage in future theatrical productions. The story takes an unexpected turn, however, as the students assimilate perfectly; one student even gives up acting to continue working at the factory.

In the process writers were sent to factories to speak with workers. Furthermore, acknowledging the ideas of the future actors would have undermined the privileged status of the factory workers. These particular supervisors, in fact, were so rigid that they did not see the actors as possessing the legitimacy to make suggestions at all and thus abolished the experiment altogether.

In this vignette Hein demonstrates how, although purportedly a classless society, social distinctions persisted in the GDR. The author slyly adds another jab at GDR reality by concluding his tale with a vengeful, ironic plot twist: His vignettes are embedded in the context of real existing socialism—that is, people experience shortages of consumer goods and work supplies; they can only travel to a limited number of countries, generally belonging to the Eastern Bloc; and education follows a predetermined path.

As befits the humorist, however, Hein portrays people who defy the system and look beyond these restrictive conditions. Even though the head of the GDR government is enthusiastic about the project, it is never realized because the leader of the Soviet Union has to approve it and denies the request without any explanation. This inexplicable display of power shows how the GDR government was under the yoke of the Soviet Union and could not act independently.

After his antlike machine is rejected, Pape gets so discouraged with his restrictive working conditions that he builds an airplane modeled after a dragonfly and flees to France. Here, we laugh about the ant and dragonfly research because it appears fantastical and incredible, but at the same time we learn how scientists were treated in Eastern Bloc countries and realize why some left for a freer environment where they could pursue their dreams and further their careers. The author sheds light on many similar incidents in his other vignettes and the black humor in some emerges from a similarly incongruous final plot twist.

One nuclear scientist featured in this series, Heinz Barwich, who was not granted the freedom to perform his work in the GDR, defected to the West. Even Honecker Wants to Leave! Hein not only crafts new myths about the GDR, but he also shows how such myths came into being in the wake of unification. One example of this myth creation is the way daily life in the GDR has become elevated to a new plane of remembrance which emphasizes its enjoyable sides and ignores the actual hardships living there entailed.

Life in the GDR was difficult, but not much of this truth remains or is getting passed down to younger generations. The episode that gives the book its title is an application for permanent residence in the Federal Republic submitted by the head of the East German government, First Party Secretary Erich Honecker, in July The technique of defamiliarization depicts familiar events or objects in unusual contexts, making them appear novel: There could be no greater questioning of GDR identity.

And, by extension, who or what is a GDR citizen? Along with this defamiliarization, carnivalesque effects are achieved through exaggeration and the introduction of the unusual, even as the event depicted here questions the validity of the East German identity. The office workers who receive his application are unable to process it because they are caught in a trap, given the high position of the applicant, his power over them as their leader, and rules in the GDR that prohibit migration to the West: Again we witness an incongruity that elicits humor while issuing a critique of GDR society and its cumbersome bureaucratic rules.

Seeing such an absurd statement, the reader will likely grab the volume with a smile on his or her face to find out what is behind it. We can imagine what awaits us in a book bearing such a title. Because they were next-door neighbors, East Germans yearned for West German consumer products shown to them on television, sent to them in care packages by their West German relatives or friends, or brought back by pensioners who were allowed to travel there.

What passed for knowledge about other countries and cultures often derived from myths, legends, apocryphal stories, and stereotypes rather than from reality. Kaminer plays with these identities by confronting the reader with a predominant stereotype of the Russians: The stereotype of the Other also reaches a level of reductive grotesquerie in such stereotypes, and as we have seen in Harpham 5 , one of the effects this grotesquerie produces is laughter. Kaminer faced such stereotypes daily after settling in Berlin, and he reveals them to have been created and perpetuated by foreign films.

Reaching back to the time before the communists assumed power in Russia, these stereotypes were found especially in films made in the United States and marketed around the world. Sie waren allesamt wild, unrasiert und unberechenbar. Kaminer shows that this mechanical, oversimplified, and clownish view of the Russians was incorrect, but implies that it allowed Americans and all Western nations, by extension to feel superior to the enemy Other.

Such depictions served the purpose of keeping the viewers in line with the ideological agendas set forth by governments in the Cold War era, despite the fact that they had been allies for several years during the Second World War. Although he is an immigrant who has assimilated for the most part into German society, Kaminer is not German by birth. This position as an outsider in Germany gives him a unique vantage point, because he can look at the changes that took place after , as well as the Cold War past, from a detached, distanciated perspective.

In Es gab keinen Sex im Sozialismus, Kaminer depicts conditions under the socialist regime in the former Soviet Union that are comparable to those in the German Democratic Republic, occasionally providing contextual explanations: Rather than talking about the bad quality of the food directly, Kaminer implies that you were considered a good Soviet pioneer if you ate it without looking at it. Taking this social imperative as an extended metaphor for the kind of behavior expected more generally in the Soviet Union, we can assume that criticism was never desirable, and that those citizens best adjusted to this requirement would get the furthest on the career ladder as adults.

Aber die Russen waren auch nicht dumm. Sie hatten in einem Moskauer Fernsehstudio eine komplette Arche Noah versammelt: Kaminer 9 The event and the calculated way it is organized expose farcical characteristics of both political systems. Playing with such characteristics unmasks the insincerity of official announcements delivered by politicians and other members of both governments, demonstrating these leaders to be incapable of improving relations between the two nations.

That officials from each system supposedly allow direct communication with the enemy at the height of the Cold War is an unlikely scenario, but the entire interaction is controlled in such a way that it sheds light on the type of supervision under which people lived on both sides of the Iron Curtain.

The above miniature ends with a paragraph clarifying the misunderstanding regarding Russians purportedly not having sex during Soviet times. When a tall, blond American in a lumberjack shirt asks about the sex life of the Russians, a plump Russian woman with a sophisticated coiffure commits the error of only partially answering the question. Man wusste zu wenig aus erster Hand. Man konnte sie angeblich wochenlang kauen. The author uncovers the banal fact that for many socialist citizens satisfying their consumer desires was more important than democracy and political freedom.

In so doing, his legends also glorify the Other. This coming-to-terms with a new reality is not unique to the Russian people; it also pertains to the East Germans after joining the Federal Republic of Germany. Conclusion When a wound is deep and fresh, it hurts, generally preventing people from being lighthearted about it.

They cannot not indulge in banter, jokes, or satire. However, once the wound is attended to and the healing has begun, the pain can give way to humor and embellished stories about its origin. As long as the division existed, it was a wound and was generally treated seriously, with gravity, in the arts. Once the Wall fell and German unity became a fact, however, the healing could begin.

Its treatment in the arts then opened up to levity, although even here, frivolity for the sheer fun of it was still rare. In their works, the past, even when it is banal or depressing, is treated with affection. Although their humor may be a way of providing a critical distance, it is never mean-spirited or vengeful; there is no settling of accounts over wrongs.

Hein employs third-person narration, which produces a greater distance from his tall tales, so that they appear more contrived. In fact, their many similarities override the differences. The underlying structure that produces the comical effects in their vignettes can be evaluated as follows: The process of achieving this insight brings the humor to the surface.

The humor also gives the accounts the sharp edge that makes them memorable. The sum of these accounts extends the individual vignettes to the lands of the grotesque. The reader wonders how people survived at all and gains respect for the survival strategies Eastern Europeans devised. In the end, the authors present one inescapable conclusion: The narrative playfulness in their texts thus provides an ambiguous, literary overgrowth which partially covers this unpleasant past. Indeed, the past, in the form of legacies from the Kaiserreich, the Weimar Republic, and the Third Reich common to both the FRG and the GDR , is also rising to the surface of this new Germany and forms part of the overgrowth that is spreading to cover the wound of separation.

These inescapable bonds are both part of the scar left by the Wall and part of the cultural and literary overgrowth which has begun to cover it. Herr Jensen steigt aus. Es gab keinen Sex im Sozialismus. Ich bin kein Berliner. Geschichten aus einem vergangenen Land. Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin. Literature in the Second Degree. Channa Newman and Claude Doubinsky.

U of Nebraska P, Grix, Jonathan, and Paul Cooke, eds. East German Distinctiveness in a Unified Germany. U of Birmingham P, Strategies of Contradiction in Art and Literature. U of Massachusetts-Amherst, Jauer, Markus, and Wolfgang Kiel. Humor als dichterische Einbildungskraft. National Identity in East Germany. Jonathan Grix and Paul Cooke. Classic Texts and Contemporary Trends. Boston and New York: Das Buch der Unterschiede.

Warum die Einheit keine ist. Die heile Welt der Diktatur. Alltag und Herrschaft in der DDR At the same time, as Stefan Wolle emphasizes in his discussion of GDR memory after , such reckonings with the past also have manifested themselves on a private level: Michele Ricci Bell advocates assert the importance of such individual and collective processes in shaping the present and future. Yet other positions on memory work, whether focused on oppressive or everyday memories of the GDR, evidence a more skeptical view, drawing attention to the dangers of coercing participation.

The eastern German actress Corinna Harfouch expressed such sentiments on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the Wende4: These cabaret texts reveal that, while memory work emerged in the early s as topical for political cabaret, cabaret writers were by no means unified in their attitudes toward its usefulness for understanding and coming to terms with the changes brought about by the Wende.

By means of a variety of satirical modes, these post cabaret writers treat contemporary forms of memory work sometimes with empathy and at other times mockingly, exposing potentially dangerous motives behind memory work, while assessing critically both the wholesale suppression of personal and collective memory, as well as the cherishing of it without discernment. This conclusion derives, for one, from the way the genre defined its purpose: After , despite the dramatic political and social changes brought about by the Wende that might have rendered political cabaret obsolete, the cabaret troupes of the former East continued to perform, addressing new audiences and adopting new objects of critique.

More importantly, it coincides with the emergence of a particular form of revaluing of the GDR past often referred to as Ostalgie. From this perspective, casting an eye on past events—not to mention on the ways that these events are managed and processed—had little relevance for the East German political cabaret stage.

In addition to factors related to the role of cabaret in socialism, there was an ideological disincentive to treating and thus drawing attention to forms of memory work in the GDR, to the extent that they might have taken up the most pressing object of collective memory work in Germany as a whole, namely, that regarding the Nazi past. To perpetuate such a sense of individuation, however, would have undermined SED objectives. Martin Sabrow has characterized the GDR power structure as a network that discouraged the empowerment of the individual: Likewise, in socialist cabaret, treatment of the individual experience or perspective ran counter to—and was potentially threatening in—a society that favored a collective over an individualized view of its citizens.

The issues surrounding the preservation of the myth of antifascism as well as the devaluation of individual memory experience as a function of a socialist ethos were both conditioned by the GDR regime such that once it unraveled, these two factors lost their relevance. While the past could not be changed, it seemed that its bearing on the present and future would make it an especially appropriate topic for cabaret during the post period. Michele Ricci Bell As the following analysis of individual texts will reveal, in critiquing memory work, cabaret writers found a broad framework for revisiting particular aspects of the GDR past, both damning and benign, in order to assess their relevance in shaping the present and future for former GDR citizens.

This framework includes, for instance, the pressing issues of guilt and complicity. Lastly, the memory work invoked in the nostalgic remembrance of the GDR, sometimes referred to as Ostalgie, is in its various forms dealt with in cabaret texts. See also Brockmann The memory work associated with identifying oneself or others either as victims or perpetrators in the GDR regime appears in post cabaret texts more often than any other theme related to this topic. Not only, as Schultz and Wagener suggest, did the question of victimhood run both along and within national borders, it also involved both collective and individual guilt and suffering.

Das ham jetzt viele, das ist keine Krankheit.


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  6. Whether or not he was a perpetrator before , the patient is now a victim of this violent blocking of memory. The dialogue adopts an increasingly farcical tone when the patient, after announcing his personal motivations for wanting to bring his past to light, eagerly awaits a potential answer: Michele Ricci Bell himself is the person in question.

    Finally, the patient counters with: Was mich betrifft, da bin ich mir noch immer nicht sicher, nur…was Sie betrifft, da bin ich mir fast sicher! The doctor, in displaying his expert ability to interrogate, as well as his knowledge of activities in which a Stasi informant might have engaged, unwittingly exposes his own relationship to that history. Indeed, by assisting another in his memory work, the doctor completes his own.

    For both patient and doctor, individual memory is a place where uncomfortable truths may be harbored and suppressed, and from which they may reemerge unpredictably. Rather, we see the doctor, with his politely phrased question, hoping for a quick escape from having to perform his own memory work.

    But this is not the real problem, as she sees it: Meine war doch bestimmt die dickste, so dagegen, wie ich immer war. In the end, as Helmut tries to defend himself, we see that no facts about his past could suffice to counter the conviction of his colleagues that he belongs in the villain category: Wie soll ich euch denn beweisen… F: In what can only be seen as a deliberate move to highlight the witchhunt the search for former Stasi officials turned into, Ristock exploits the moral implications of the Stasi file, which appears in several post cabaret texts, to show how it can play a role in facilitating the failure of memory work.

    Notably, a failure to remember, or even to mention the past in the public sphere, is problematized here, not memory work itself. The text suggests, rather, that engaging in memory work would prevent such denial from happening. Indeed, Ensikat implies that the memoirs spun by those only too willing to forget might be likened in their fanciful content to fairy tales. At the same time, his text invites another parallel: Die Ho-chi-Minh-Strasse gibt es nicht mehr. Aber mein Bruder gibt es noch, hoffentlich.

    Die Ho-chi-Minh wurde umbenannt. Wenn mein Bruder vielleicht auch umbenannt wurde […]. Strangely, after , it was not the memories of East Germans that failed. The overwhelming nature of such a change for this man is underscored, for one, by his absurd, but also empathy-invoking, suggestion that perhaps his brother, too, was drawn in by this tide of change and forced to change his name.

    Ist das nicht ein Umweg? And, unlike the kinds of memories that one might like to suppress, these are of the familiar and comforting variety. At the time of unification, GDR citizens entered, as Ten Dyke suggests, a world in which their memories were rendered irrelevant. Nevertheless, these undertones are balanced by the genuine plight of this individual who attempts to reconcile his memories in a world that is no longer his own.

    The first, an eastern German woman, stakes a claim to her house that is now being seized by a western German baker. Und wieso reflektiert der dann auf Ihr Haus? Mein Mann hatte doch damals diesen Ristock 65 As the process of recollecting in legal testimony continues, each additional story is appended to the one before, trumping the previous one in significance. The last claim, however, takes precedence over the rest, not only because of its relative age, but also because the claimant has left no victim in his wake. After reflecting on the value of his claim, Mandelstam concludes: Taken together, they fulfill the task of connecting a vast array of problematic memories of the past century.

    Revealing this paradox in a series of skits, Ristock shows that there are ethical ramifications of working collectively to bridge historical memories. This type of memory work requires clarifying and verifying individual memories, especially when personal interests are at stake. Complaints about the present again and again take the form of a comparison with the past, captured in the phrase: Michele Ricci Bell At one point, the little man exclaims: Aber wissen Se, wie die geschmeckt haben?

    As this critical analysis reveals, though the texts vary in their positions toward the feasibility and desirability of memory work for eastern Germans after , they all highlight important, if uncomfortable, issues. Moreover, there is a sense in these two texts that remembering correctly can bear ethical fruit, whether as a corrective for past wrongs or as a precedent for future developments. At times, it appears to be the privilege of the few to forget, and at other times, to remember. Whether cautiously optimistic about the prospects for memory work, or decidedly cynical, these cabaret texts persistently raise the issue of hypocrisy as a central factor in determining the feasibility and efficacy of memory work.

    When they emphasize the limits and potential abuse of memory work and imply that it is futile, they understate the importance of efforts to come to terms with individual and collective pasts. Viewed from a different perspective, this understatement might be read as a conscious move to preserve the more positive memories of the GDR in the face of growing claims of its status as an Unrechtsstaat. Viewed from the most positive angle, depicting the results of memory work with satirical humor can be seen as a democratizing gesture, such that neither remembering nor forgetting may be wielded as a privilege of the few, but can be initiated by anyone without duress and as a personal choice.

    Gibt es ein Leben nach der Wiedervereinigung? Ensikat, Peter, and Wolfgang Schaller. Auf Dich kommt es an, nicht auf alle. Private Archive of the Herkuleskeule, Dresden, Secondary Works Adam, Hubertus. East German Everyday Culture and Politics. Katherine Pence and Paul Betts. Literature and German Reunification. Brief an alle, die es angeht. Zum Theater der DDR. Remembrance Reified and Other Shoah Business. Germany as a Culture of Remembrance: Promises and Limits of Writing History.

    U of North Carolina P, Mike Dennis and Eva Kolinsky. Zu den Aufgaben und Problemen der Erinnerungsarbeit heute. Vogel and Ernst Piper. Ralf Altenhof and Eckhard Jesse. Gauck, Joachim and Martin Fry. Migration into Other Pasts. The Rush to German Unity. Cabaret in the German Democratic Republic. Negotiating Cabaret Performance and Book Production. Es gab uns wirklich. Memory, Gender and Informers for the Stasi.

    Ein Psychogramm der DDR. Life Courses in the Tranformation of East Germany. Between Ambivalence and Focused Political Criticism. The East German Dictatorship: Too Near, Too Far. Crises of Memory and the Second World War. Implications of the Wende. Alon Confino and Peter Fritzsche. U of Illinois P, The humor is also not present in spite of the tragedy.

    Instead, the humor functions in tandem with the tragedy, percolating through it, existing in part because of it. In other words, the comic and the tragic work in congruity to produce incongruity. Laughter plunges the reader into a sobering, deeper understanding of the tragedy. The New Wave of Holocaust Comedies! In Train of Life, the comical narrative is a fictional construction about hijacking a train and thereby escaping Nazi persecution. In all three films, a temporary lie holds back the weight of the tragedy so that when the truth is finally revealed, the tragedy forced on the viewer comes suddenly, with a heavy impact.

    Sabina Schroeter explains the use of the word as follows: Bezeichnet werden mit diesem Begriff Personen, die aus den ehemaligen Ostgebieten geflohen sind, vertrieben oder verschleppt wurden. He is therefore approximately ten years old in Horns Ende and Von allem Anfang an Robert Blankenship ersetzen sei. Marion Demutz reveals details of her amorous, teenage relationship with Haber.

    Peter Koller, who ends up in prison, relates how he and Haber smuggled people into West Berlin. On one level this conflict causes the reader to laugh simply because Bernhard is correct and thereby subversive, as schoolchildren are not supposed to defy their teachers. More so, however, this scene provokes laughter because the geographical location of the city has not changed.

    The Polish name has been substituted for the German one, but this exchange represents not merely a different appellation; the name signifies much more. Bernhard answers that his father only has one left hand What Bernhard does not mention at this time, although it is revealed later in the novel, is that his father actually does not have a right arm, having lost it in a Russian prisoner-of-war camp. One might wonder what could be amusing about a one-armed carpenter. Perhaps it concerns imagining what a one-armed carpenter could possibly build.

    In any event, the question lingers whether or not laughing about a one-armed carpenter can be justified. Is this really a laughing matter? If so, what makes it comical? The answer may be explained at least partially by the incongruity theory of humor, whereby the contrast between what is expected and what is encountered can appear comical. Vladimir Propp surveys incongruity theory in chapter 16 of his formalist study On the Comic and Laughter orig. One expects a carpenter to have two arms. The question posed here is, therefore, to what extent can incongruity theory enhance our understanding of how humor is used in Landnahme?

    A Philosophical Analysis One is blind, and the other only has one arm. The one-armed soldier, missing his left arm, guides the blind man with his right. Mann opines that blindness is the worse, yet more interesting, of the two afflictions, asserting ironically that the man who at least still has his right arm will be able to find work.

    Mann goes on to describe, however, how even the blind man seems to be perpetually content, not having to see the horrible sights at the end of World War I that those who can see must witness.

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    In this case, however, the ultimate irony is that the one-armed adult leader leads the children astray toward the evils of fascism and the defeat of the Third Reich in World War II. The narrator in the Wolf passage has the advantage of hindsight, allowing her to see the irony of the one-armed Nazi leading the children. Like the two veterans described by Mann, the one-armed, avid Nazi presumably takes an optimistic attitude toward fulfilling his role as a Hitler Youth leader. Second, Robinson lost his arm in the refining of that crop for which, in large part, black African slaves were brought to the U.

    South, slaves from whose labor many white plantation owners became rich. Indeed, Schlegel leads the commune to thrive against all odds, until the day he accuses the East German Socialist Unity Party functionaries of implementing poor agricultural policies and then is sentenced to fifteen years in prison. Johnny thus stands in a long tradition of exemplary literary figures who become sacrificial victims of oppressive dictatorships. Why does the thought of a one-armed carpenter provoke laughter? Both Thomson and Gillum , however, go on to illustrate that the comic and the monstrous are two sides of the spectrum of the grotesque.

    Similarly, Alice Mills sets up a spectrum between the tragic grotesque and the comic grotesque. The tragic grotesque represents the effect of the monstrous, while the comic Bakhtinian grotesque is liberating Mills 1- 5. But even for Bakhtin, the grotesque also causes displeasure Bakhtin It is not that Robinson is a monster; quite to the contrary, Robinson is one of the proverbial mockingbirds that one ought not kill.

    Robinson and his missing limb, however, represent the tragic— and not at all comical—fate of African-Americans in the U. Oppressive societal conditions are thus berated through the metonymic vehicle of his missing limb, but without producing a liberating humor. The monstrosity in the case of To Kill a Mockingbird, moreover, is additionally projected, somewhat exaggeratedly, onto the impoverished white characters in the novel, while the wealthy lawyer Atticus Finch is deified. Tom Robinson, however, remains both physically and symbolically one-armed.

    While the one arm is missing, the other arm labors to build a new future, at least until this optimism is suppressed by other tragic events. Their physical disability, coupled with their physically demanding professions, symbolize the juxtaposition of despair and hope at work in provincial postwar East Germany. The fact that the elder Haber lost his arm in a Russian prisoner-of-war camp bears symbolic meaning in the wider context of German and European history. The missing limb lies, quite literally, deep in European soil, with its long, tragic history, and offers multiple levels of incongruity.

    The missing limb is both an incongruity that elicits laughter and an object of loss. He is engaged in the carpentry work of mourning, as well as the work of providing for his family against all odds. This reminder, like the Haber family, is not welcome among the townspeople. For these reasons, the Guldenberg townspeople distance themselves from the Haber family. Such insults do not only come from cruel schoolchildren, and they also target families besides the Habers.

    Such name-calling, in fact, is a town-wide occurrence.

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    Sie sprachen anders und lebten anders, sie hatten andere Dinge erlebt. Irgendwie kamen sie aus einem Deutschland, das nicht unser Deutschland war. If the missing arm is a memorial, what can be made of the intact arm? What does the carpenter build with it? These conundrums represent a further grotesque incongruity.

    If the missing arm represents past suffering, the intact arm symbolizes the hope for a better future. East Germany and the Holocaust The carpenter, with his intact arm, in fact builds a workshop for himself. However, it does not stand for long, not because it was built incompetently, but rather because the people of Bad Guldenberg burn it down As further evidence of the animosity of the townspeople toward him, the city does not grant him a permit to accept apprentices.

    Thus, as Hein illustrates through this series of grotesque incongruities, the hurdles the elder Haber must overcome in order to succeed in his profession derive less from his physical disability than from the prejudices of the local townspeople. Suddenly one day the corpse of the one-armed carpenter is found hanging. The townspeople readily assume he killed himself because of the 10 Phil McKnight makes the same point: Thus, in his lifetime, the one-armed carpenter does not build much that survives him, and his death appears as grotesque as his life.

    But, like his father, he also has a difficult time doing so. Bernhard is the victim of jokes in school and does not achieve academic success. Despite all odds, Bernhard eventually manages to open his own carpentry shop, one of several ventures that lead to the accumulation of wealth. One day, the two young men seize the opportunity to steal the tools from an unlocked trailer used by a construction brigade tasked with building a bridge in Bad Guldenberg: Bevor wir hineinkletterten, kontrollierten wir die ganze Umgebung.

    In der Ecke lag ein ganzer Berg von gusseisernen Kupplungen. Bernhard war es, der damit begann, einen Stapel von Werkzeugen zusammenzustellen. And he invests these tools wisely. The tools represent the capital necessary to perform the carpentry work of mourning, of filling in what is missing. One might go so far as to say that the one-armed carpenter built a lasting structure after all, although this structure may not be as solid as it at first seems. A Postwall Carnival as the Grotesque Site of Comedy and Tragedy If the collapse of the Berlin Wall invited a big party, the reality of German unification turned out to be a major hangover.

    The hopes of eastern Germans were dashed by unemployment, and western Germans still complain twenty years later of having had to pay for construction projects in the East. Moreover, nationalism, racism, and xenophobia were unleashed in eastern Germany, as in other former Eastern Bloc states. During the carnival over which he presides, however, the now privileged Bernhard is slapped in the face, as it were, by two painful truths: Bernhard apparently does not remember Thomas Nicolas.

    In a drunken state, Paul boasts: Was haben sie da zu suchen? Representations of German Wartime Suffering from to the Present As Bakhtin indicates, matters become turned on their heads during carnival celebrations. Here, the xenophobia has come full circle. According to Sigurd Kitzerow, Paul wanted to be an automobile mechanic, but Bernhard talked Paul into learning the trade of carpentry, and Paul is a competent carpenter, though there are structures that he cannot build.

    Paul, like Bernhard, is a carpenter who builds future- oriented structures, at least in part because he is unaware of the grotesque metaphorical significance of the missing limb. With such reconsideration, the structure of the present becomes more solid to him. Hein indicates with this complex metaphorical construct that future physical, familial, and societal structures can only be built to last if one recognizes the interplay of meaning between the past and the present. As Phil McKnight summarizes: Having inherited a metaphorical missing limb, Bernhard employs persistence, revenge, and all of the tools he can acquire to build a place for himself in a societal framework that, in the end, not only allows him to assimilate into Bad Guldenberg, but also makes him perhaps the most powerful man there.

    He has, moreover, come to assimilate and to acquire power and prosperity in part by means of the vocation passed down to him by his father: Such is the nature of the grotesque as it is personified by the one-armed carpenter. Whenever the intact arm congratulates itself on its progress, the missing arm reminds the intact arm of its failures. Das ist die Zwischenzeit. Von allem Anfang an. Cholonek oder Der liebe Gott aus Lehm.

    Aus dem Leben von Gesine Cresspahl. To Kill a Mockingbird. New York and Boston: Cecchi Gori Group, Secondary Works Bakhtin, Mikhail. Dordrecht, Netherlands and Boston, MA: The Language of Comic Narratives: Humor Construction in Short Stories. East Germany and the Holocaust. A Study of Thomas Mann. Secker and Warburg, DDR-Autoren vor und nach der Wiedervereinigung. Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, The Ethics of Psychoanalysis. Papers on the Grotesque. New York et al.: Remembering the Past in Contemporary Germany.

    Preisendanz, Wolfgang, and Rainer Warning, eds. On the Comic and Laughter. U of Toronto P, orig. Zeitschrift zur Pflege und Erforschung der deutschen Sprache A Nation of Victims?: Representations of German Wartime Suffering from to the Present. Studien zum DDR-typischen Wortschatz. Berlin and New York: Taberner, Stuart, and Paul Cooke, eds. The Sublime Object of Ideology. According to Reimann, this generation struggled to construct its literary voice outside of the official GDR cultural establishment.

    Hensel, with her personal style of writing, located between fairy tales and satire, jokes and surrealism, estranging fantasy and the grotesque, succeeds in offering an exemplary, unique vision Mabee ; Nentwich 4. Her writing is distinguished by an elaborate language, which features local German dialects spoken by harsh, blunt characters. The combination of extremely diverse thematic and formal ingredients, which result in challenging, disconcerting topoi and images, confers on her novels a dissonance that appears subversive and repulsive and does not conform to mainstream tastes.

    By means of this literary strategy she offers a singular perspective on Germany in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Gunter Konarske, born to a single mother as a consequence of an affair with her boss, the respected local doctor, is presented as a strange and lonely child, a brilliant student of medicine, and an ambitious doctor who is successful both in the GDR and in unified Germany. He dreams of recognition, prestige, and power; is fixated on winning the Nobel Prize in Medicine; and does not hesitate to break moral and ethical rules to achieve his goals.

    Eventually he starts experimenting with unorthodox medical treatments. By contrast, Adele, also born to a single mother on the same day as Gunter, is orphaned at an early age and experiences a poor and unfortunate childhood. Their abusive marriage reaches its climax several years after the fall of the Berlin Wall when, craving international medical glory, Doctor Konarske begins injecting his wife with a new serum he has developed that is supposed to reverse the aging process, but which instead eventually results in her dramatic death.

    She thereby emphasizes the persistent impossibility of the villagers to come to terms with their past and to cope with the collective nature of socialist society, as well as with the agitated times of postwall Germany. The body types she [Hensel] highlights are those that display trauma a psychological state in physical form, those that use the body to act out discontent, or those that represent the body as uncontrollable or disruptive of cultural signification. More specifically, it draws connections between three main literary strategies tied to her use of the grotesque body in the novel: The latter two strategies are moreover explored by drawing connections to the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Gothic novel, a genre that expresses anxieties and fears related to crises and changes in the present by referring to an unreal microcosmos that is linked to a lurid past Botting 3.

    Here unification and its consequences— infrastructural and psychosocial renovation and reconstruction—are represented metaphorically by an artificial reversing of the aging process. Despite its graphic focus on external appearances and transformations, the novel communicates a pessimistic message on the need for individuals to reflect on the inner disruptions caused by German unification.

    Freudian, Foucauldian, and feminist theories offer fruitful theoretical instruments for understanding these bodies in their dialectical relationship to authority and power.