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INTRODUCTION: HERTA MÜLLER AND THE CURRENTS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY

Karin Bauer, Brigid Haines Orcid Logo, Michel Mallet, Jenny Watson

German Life and Letters, Volume: 73, Issue: 1, Pages: 1 - 9

Swansea University Author: Brigid Haines Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/glal.12257

Abstract

Ten years on from the award to her of the Nobel Prize in Literature and twenty years after German reunification and the fall of the Ceausescu regime in Romania this volume of essays by international scholars revisits Herta Müller’s work and places it within broader intellectual, geographical, and hi...

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Published in: German Life and Letters
ISSN: 0016-8777 1468-0483
Published: Wiley 2020
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa50657
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Abstract: Ten years on from the award to her of the Nobel Prize in Literature and twenty years after German reunification and the fall of the Ceausescu regime in Romania this volume of essays by international scholars revisits Herta Müller’s work and places it within broader intellectual, geographical, and historical horizons than has hitherto been attempted. It also reconciles the public intellectual with the literary author. For while it has long been clear that Müller’s aesthetically innovative and highly acclaimed novels, essays, and collages stand as a testament to the major upheavals of twentieth-century European history, her self-adopted role as moral voice and her willingness to make broad historical comparisons over the past three decades have often met with controversy. The broad relevance of Müller’s ethical and political concerns – central, we argue here, to both her literary work and her public statements – has been underestimated in both the feuilleton and scholarly criticism in favour of a focus on the historical interest of her life under Romanian communism. But her warnings regarding the vulnerability of the West’s post-war settlement, denazification and the stability of Europe, received by some as tiresome ten years ago, are, at the time of writing, thrown into sharp relief by the greatest humanitarian crisis Europe has faced since 1945 – the so-called refugee crisis – and by the global rise of populism. Put plainly, the complacency that might previously have allowed Müller’s interventions on the topics of xenophobia, nationalism, flight, and expulsion to be regarded as pertaining solely to Europe’s pre-1989 history is no longer sustainable.
Item Description: Special Issue: HERTA MÜLLER AND THE CURRENTS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY: A SPECIAL NUMBER. Brigit Haines organised the conference which gave rise to these papers, jointly edited the volume, jointly authored the introduction and am sole author of the article 'Humanity in Dark Times: Herta Müller and Hannah Arendt'
Keywords: Herta Müller, Romania, Nobel Prize in Literature, Memory Studies, Hannah Arendt, Post-Communism
College: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Issue: 1
Start Page: 1
End Page: 9