Islands and Insularity in the Post-East German Novel
Public and Private Worlds
Boydell & Brewer
ISBN 978-1-64014-243-5
Standardpreis
Bibliografische Daten
Buch. Hardcover
2026
Umfang: 192 S.
Format (B x L): 15,2 x 22,9 cm
Verlag: Boydell & Brewer
ISBN: 978-1-64014-243-5
Weiterführende bibliografische Daten
Das Werk ist Teil der Reihe: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture; 263
Produktbeschreibung
Thirty-five years after it ended, East Germany still arouses widespread interest. Jenny Erpenbeck's Kairos, set against the backdrop of the country's collapse, recently won the International Booker Prize, and Katia Hoyer's history of East Germany, Beyond the Wall, was an international bestseller. Alongside this, tropes of islands or insular spaces have proliferated in German-language literature of recent decades, sparking critical interest. The present study analyzes these tropes in twenty-first century novels by seven authors from the former East Germany, looking at what they say about both the GDR and contemporary Germany through the relationships they depict between individuals and society.
Retreats to islands and private, insular spaces in these novels suggest their characters' desire for autonomy and the creation of private "counterworlds" in the face of a public world that they experience as alienating, destructive, or compelling conformity, whether during the GDR years or in post-unification Germany. Drawing on a variety of literary theories to examine place and time in the novels, the study uses a range of psychological models to consider these works' explorations of the nature of the self and its interaction with the social environment. It argues that their authors show the negotiation of a stable sense of identity and meaningful forms of self-determination to be an enduring challenge for individuals before and after 1989.
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