Weimar Colonialism

Discourses and Legacies of Post-Imperialism in Germany aufter 1918

Cite this publication as

Florian Krobb (Hg.), Elaine Martin (Hg.), Weimar Colonialism (2014), Aisthesis Verlag, Bielefeld, ISBN: 9783849814878

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Description / Abstract

This volume examines aspects of the German colonial consciousness following the end of empire in 1918. Entirely stripped of colonial possessions under the Treaty of Versailles, Germany, unlike other European nations, was faced with the end of empire well before the end of the European colonial project. This loss left behind a complex legacy that permeated the political, literary and cultural discourses of the postwar period. By scrutinising the resonances between literary intervention and public discourses, and between their respective agendas and methods, the contributors tease out the intricacies of the colonial debate in Weimar Germany. Weimar revanchism is unveiled as an attempt to salve a humiliated national ego and refashion Germany as a model agent of the †˜civilising mission†™ in colonial space against the backdrop of military defeat, political collapse and foreign occupation. The contributions also highlight the framing of Eastern European and Near Eastern space as colonial, the complex mediality of colonial debate and the lasting political and literary legacy of “Weimar Colonialism†.

Table of content

  • Frontcover
  • Titel
  • Impressum
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Florian Krobb and Elaine Martin: Introduction: Coloniality in Post-Imperial Culture
  • Heidrun Kämper (Mannheim): Linguistic Representations of Colonialism as an Ideological-Discursive Construct in the Early Weimar Republic
  • Elaine Martin (Maynooth): “Die Bestien im Lande†
  • Catherine Repussard (Strasbourg)†˜: Back to the Wild†™
  • Stefan Hermes (Freiburg): Colonising the Mind
  • Brett M. Van Hoesen (Nevada): Re-staging Genocide
  • Hinnerk Onken (Cologne): “Südamerika: Ein Zukunftsland der Menschheit†
  • Florian Krobb (Maynooth): “Doch das orientalische ist es ja eben, was uns interessiert†
  • Kristin Kopp (Missouri): The Weimar †˜Drang nach Osten†™
  • Jason Verber (Austin Peay State): Remembering at a Time of Forgetting
  • Dirk Göttsche (Nottingham): Memory and Critique of Weimar Colonialism in Contemporary German Literature
  • List of Contributors
  • Index
  • Backcover

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