Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Translations
- Introduction to the Contemporary Short Story in German
- 1 Berlin Shorts: The German Capital in the Short Story of the Twenty-First Century
- 2 The German Crime Story in the Twenty-First Century
- 3 Performance, Performativity, and the Contemporary German Kurzgeschichte
- 4 Cramped Spaces, Creative Bottlenecks: Sudabeh Mohafez’s Das Zehn-Zeilen-Buch and the Short-Short
- 5 Bodo Kirchhoff’s Widerfahrnis: A Novelle for Our Time?
- 6 The Liminal Space of the Short Story: Clemens Meyer’s Die Nacht, die Lichter and Die stillen Trabanten
- 7 Framing the Presence: Judith Hermann’s Lettipark
- 8 Of Unhomed Subjects and Unsettled Voices: Alois Hotschnig’s Die Kinder Beruhigte Das Nicht
- 9 Authorial Development and Fluid Spaces in the “Complete Stories”: Peter Stamm’s Der Lauf Der Dinge
- 10 On Disappearing: Reading Ulrike Almut Sandig with Sylvia Bovenschen
- 11 Metamorphic Becomings: Yoko Tawada’s Opium Für Ovid: Ein Kopfkissenbuch Von 22 Frauen
- 12 Melinda Nadj Abonji and Jurczok 1001: Performance, Politics, and Poetry
- 13 Rhizomatic Wanderings: The Writings of Gabriele Petricek
- 14 Trends and Issues in the Contemporary German-Language Short Story
- Appendix: Contemporary German-Language Short Stories in Translation
- Bibliography of Primary Texts
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Introduction to the Contemporary Short Story in German
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Translations
- Introduction to the Contemporary Short Story in German
- 1 Berlin Shorts: The German Capital in the Short Story of the Twenty-First Century
- 2 The German Crime Story in the Twenty-First Century
- 3 Performance, Performativity, and the Contemporary German Kurzgeschichte
- 4 Cramped Spaces, Creative Bottlenecks: Sudabeh Mohafez’s Das Zehn-Zeilen-Buch and the Short-Short
- 5 Bodo Kirchhoff’s Widerfahrnis: A Novelle for Our Time?
- 6 The Liminal Space of the Short Story: Clemens Meyer’s Die Nacht, die Lichter and Die stillen Trabanten
- 7 Framing the Presence: Judith Hermann’s Lettipark
- 8 Of Unhomed Subjects and Unsettled Voices: Alois Hotschnig’s Die Kinder Beruhigte Das Nicht
- 9 Authorial Development and Fluid Spaces in the “Complete Stories”: Peter Stamm’s Der Lauf Der Dinge
- 10 On Disappearing: Reading Ulrike Almut Sandig with Sylvia Bovenschen
- 11 Metamorphic Becomings: Yoko Tawada’s Opium Für Ovid: Ein Kopfkissenbuch Von 22 Frauen
- 12 Melinda Nadj Abonji and Jurczok 1001: Performance, Politics, and Poetry
- 13 Rhizomatic Wanderings: The Writings of Gabriele Petricek
- 14 Trends and Issues in the Contemporary German-Language Short Story
- Appendix: Contemporary German-Language Short Stories in Translation
- Bibliography of Primary Texts
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
SINCE THE 1990s, the short story has reemerged in the German-speaking world as a vibrant literary genre, serving as a medium for both literary experimentation and popular writing. In the twenty-first century this boom has continued, with authors like Judith Hermann and Peter Stamm making a significant impact on German-language literary culture and, in translation, on literary culture in the UK and USA. Despite the wealth of short-story publications across different media and from a wide range of authors, there is a relative dearth of critical work focusing on the shortstory form as such. Together, the contributions to this volume offer an analysis of the variety of German-language short-story writing in the twenty-first century, and they aim to establish a framework for further research into individual authors and into important themes and formal concerns. The introduction makes the case for a flexible and responsive approach to the concerns raised by individual authors, stories, and collections, and provides an overview of the volume. In a series of themed and author-focused chapters, the volume offers an exploration of important developments and trends in the German-language short story today.
This volume took its initial cue from an earlier volume on contemporary literature edited by Lyn Marven and Stuart Taberner, Emerging German-Language Novelists of the Twenty-First Century. As Marven suggests in the Introduction to the earlier volume, ultracontemporary literature poses difficulties for researchers not only in the practicalities of seeking out and discovering new publications—arguably intensified rather than made easier by the publishing proliferation of the digital age—but also in the task of assessing the literary qualities of the texts in what may be a critical vacuum. Such “unknown and untested” texts force us to confront our own critical expectations and judgment: what makes a text worthy of study and analysis is not in the end a matter of “quality” as such, whatever that may mean to each one of us or to the reading public at large, but rather its own intrinsic interest. The sheer variety and versatility of short fiction forms mean each text must necessarily define its own genre on its own terms.
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- Information
- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2020