Speaking the Unspeakable in Postwar Germany is an interdisciplinary study of a diverse set of public speeches given by major literary and cultural figures in the 1950s and 1960s. Through close readings of canonical speeches by Hannah Arendt, Theodor W. Adorno, Ingeborg Bachmann, Martin Buber, Paul Celan, Uwe Johnson, Peter Szondi, and Peter Weiss, Sonja Boos demonstrates that these speakers both facilitated and subverted the construction of a public discourse about the Holocaust in postwar West Germany. The author’s analysis of original audio recordings of the speech events (several of which will be available on a companion website) improves our understanding of the spoken, performative dimension of public speeches. Speaking the Unspeakable in Postwar Germany emphasizes the social constructedness of discourse, experience, and identity, but does not neglect the pragmatic conditions of aesthetic and intellectual production—most notably, the felt need to respond to the breach in tradition caused by the Holocaust. The book thereby illuminates the process by which a set of writers and intellectuals, instead of trying to mend what they perceived as a radical break in historical continuity or corroborating the myth of a "new beginning," searched for ways to make this historical rupture rhetorically and semantically discernible and literally audible.
Mann, Gunter. 1985. Franz Joseph Gall (1758–1828) und Samuel Thomas von Soemmerring: Kranioskopie und Gehirnforschung zur Goethezeit. In Samuel Thomas von Soemmering und die Gelehrten der Goethezeit, ed. Gunter Mann and Franz Dumont, ...
Jones, Howard, and Martin H. Jones, The Oxford Guide to Middle High German (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019), 736 pp. Morris, Bridget, and Veronica O'Mara (eds.), The Translation of the Works of St. Birgitta of Sweden into the ...
... here–here Romero, Brenda, works by, “Train” (board game) here–here Romero, John here Rondel, Israel here Roosevelt, Franklin D. here Roots (television miniseries) here Rosenberg, Ethel here Rosenberg, Julius here Rosenblat, Herman, ...
1998. Critical Models: Interventions and Catchwords. Translated by Henry W. Pickford. New York: Columbia University Press. Bachmann, Ingeborg. 1982. Werke 4: Essays, Reden, Vermischte Schriften, Anhang, edited by Christine Koschel.
11. Judith Malina, The Piscator Notebook (New York: Routledge, 2017). 12. Erwin Piscator, Schriften, ed. Ludwig Hoffmann (Berlin: Hens elverlag, 1968), II, 304. 13. Walter Benjamin, Illuminations, ed. Hannah Arendt (New York: S o en, ...
... Agnes Heller on The Concept of the Beautiful, and a co-edited and co-authored anthology with Megan Craig on Richard J. Bernstein and the Expansion of American Philosophy: Thinking the Plural (all published by Rowman & Littlefield).
These distinctions, which comprise the Order of Discourse, are meticulously scrutinized and discarded in his book No todo es vigilia la de los ojos abiertos (Not all is Wakefulness with Open Eyes). The Subject–Object distinction, ...
... German Studies, I feel that my task is to problematize the enterprise of talking about, or representing, the Shoah ... postwar German identity and culture. Perhaps a way out of the paradox of speaking the unspeakable and teaching the ...
For this re-evaluation of the politics of German territorial estates, see Robert von Friedeburg, Self-Defence and Religious Strife in Early Modern Europe: England and Germany, 1530–1680 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2002); von Friedeburg, ...
... postwar Germany, we still lack the requisite knowledge of the dominant discourses at the time in order to fully ... speaking about the experience of war and death. Of course, this did not happen right away. As I have shown elsewhere ...