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Writing and the West German Protest MovementsWriting and the West German Protest Movements

Writing and the West German Protest Movements

Mererid Puw Davies

About this book

The 1960s protest movements marked an astonishing moment for West Germany. They developed a political critique, but are above all distinctive for their overwhelming emphasis on culture and the symbolic. In particular, reading and writing had unique prestige for protestors, who produced an extraordinary textual culture which was by turns polemical, witty, provocative, reflective and offensive. The avant-garde roots of anti-authoritarianism are often as palpable within it as a debt to high literature; but due to its sometimes (apparently) vehemently anti-literary tone, it is frequently overlooked by traditional criticism. The volume outlines an anti-authoritarian poetics by presenting close readings of some emblematic texts, many of them forgotten, others better known. The study embeds its analyses in historical, cultural, political and aesthetic contexts, in order to illuminate some representative moments and preoccupations in protest writing, and it argues that this prolific textual culture exists in a complex tension between utopian impulses and the shadows of the past. --

Details

OL Work ID
OL21607165W

Subjects

German literature, history and criticismOpposition (political science)AuthoritarianismProtest movementsPolitics and government

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.