德国的
叙述的
难民
国家(计算机科学)
官僚主义
功率(物理)
期货合约
历史
性别研究
媒体研究
政治学
社会学
法学
政治
艺术
文学类
金融经济学
物理
经济
量子力学
考古
计算机科学
算法
作者
Jennifer M. Gully,Lynn Mie Itagaki
标识
DOI:10.1353/mfs.2020.0020
摘要
Published at the height of the Syrian refugee crisis, Jenny Erpenbeck’s novel Gehen, ging, gegangen (Go, Went, Gone) posits a new German national narrative for the age of migration. Detailing state bureaucracies and how they thwart the characters’ futures, the novel depicts conflicts between official narratives and personal memory that expose state power over representations of the past. The novel expands the German memory regime by incorporating migrant memories into national ones, connecting past Holocaust victims and Silesian expellees to present African and Muslim refugees and establishing all as fundamental to the nation’s long history of migration.
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