9/11 in European Literature
-15%
portes grátis
9/11 in European Literature
Negotiating Identities Against the Attacks and What Followed
Frank, Svenja
Springer International Publishing AG
12/2017
386
Dura
Inglês
9783319642086
15 a 20 dias
6165
Descrição não disponível.
9/11 in European Literature. Negotiating Identities Against the Attacks and What Followed.- 9/11: The Interpretation of Disaster as Disaster of Interpretation - an American Catastrophe Reflected in American and European Discourses.- The Wind of the Hudson: Gerhard Richter's September (2005) and the European Perception of Catastrophe.- Burning from the inside out': Let the Great World Spin (2009).- Seeing is Disbelieving: The Contested Visibility of 9/11 in France.- Cultural and Historical Memory in English and German Discursive Responses to 9/11.- The Post-9/11 World in Three Polish Responses: Zagajewski, Skolimowski, Tochman.- The Islamic World as Other in Oriana Fallaci's 'Trilogy'.- National Identity and Literary Culture after 9/11:Pro- and Anti-Americanism in Frederic Beigbeder's Windows on the World(2003) and Thomas Hettche's Woraus wir gemacht sind (2006).- The Mimicry of Dialogue: Thomas Lehr's September. Fata Morgana (2010).- Europe and Its Discontents: Intra-European Violence in Dutch Literature after 9/11.- Tourist/Terrorist. Narrating Uncertainty in Early European Literature on Guantanamo.- Appendix.
Assunto não disponível.
9/11 Europe;National Trauma;September 11 attacks;Muslim society;post-national identities;Thomas Kling;Colum McCann;Let the Great World Spin;middle east;9/11 social media;cultural and historical memory;Ian McEwan Saturday;Bernhard Schlink;Adam Zagajewski;Oriana Fallaci Trilogy;literary culture after 9/11;Frederic Beigbeder Windows of the World;Thomas Tettche;terrorist attacks literature;Twin Towers: poesie
9/11 in European Literature. Negotiating Identities Against the Attacks and What Followed.- 9/11: The Interpretation of Disaster as Disaster of Interpretation - an American Catastrophe Reflected in American and European Discourses.- The Wind of the Hudson: Gerhard Richter's September (2005) and the European Perception of Catastrophe.- Burning from the inside out': Let the Great World Spin (2009).- Seeing is Disbelieving: The Contested Visibility of 9/11 in France.- Cultural and Historical Memory in English and German Discursive Responses to 9/11.- The Post-9/11 World in Three Polish Responses: Zagajewski, Skolimowski, Tochman.- The Islamic World as Other in Oriana Fallaci's 'Trilogy'.- National Identity and Literary Culture after 9/11:Pro- and Anti-Americanism in Frederic Beigbeder's Windows on the World(2003) and Thomas Hettche's Woraus wir gemacht sind (2006).- The Mimicry of Dialogue: Thomas Lehr's September. Fata Morgana (2010).- Europe and Its Discontents: Intra-European Violence in Dutch Literature after 9/11.- Tourist/Terrorist. Narrating Uncertainty in Early European Literature on Guantanamo.- Appendix.
9/11 Europe;National Trauma;September 11 attacks;Muslim society;post-national identities;Thomas Kling;Colum McCann;Let the Great World Spin;middle east;9/11 social media;cultural and historical memory;Ian McEwan Saturday;Bernhard Schlink;Adam Zagajewski;Oriana Fallaci Trilogy;literary culture after 9/11;Frederic Beigbeder Windows of the World;Thomas Tettche;terrorist attacks literature;Twin Towers: poesie