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New German Critique

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

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Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde dic. 1973 / hasta oct. 2008 JSTOR

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0094-033X

Editor responsable

Duke University Press (DUP)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

The Reification of Consciousness: Husserl's Phenomenology in Lukács's Identical Subject-Object

Richard Westerman

Palabras clave: General Arts and Humanities; Cultural Studies.

Pp. 97-130

Aura and Charisma: Two Useful Concepts in Critical Theory

C. Stephen Jaeger

Pp. 17-34

Max Weber and Charisma: A Transatlantic Affair

Joshua Derman

Palabras clave: General Arts and Humanities; Cultural Studies.

Pp. 51-88

Seducing the Crowd: The Leader in Crowd Psychology

Urs Stäheli; Eric Savoth

Pp. 63-77

Critical Approaches to Heimat and the “Spatial Turn”

Friederike Eigler

The German concept of Heimat carries a rich set of cultural and ideological connotations that combine notions of belonging and identity with affective attachment to a specific place or region. At a time when regional realms have regained significance not only in sociopolitical life but also in cultural and literary discourses, critical engagement with recent studies of spatiality is potentially highly productive. Yet studies of Heimat rarely consider these new discourses on space, while studies on literary representations of space seldom include approaches to Heimat. This article is thus guided by two main questions: how can Heimat as a term of literary analysis profit from more deliberate and nuanced considerations of space and place, and what can literary representations of Heimat contribute to transdisciplinary discourses on space and place? Some traditional representations of Heimat bring to the fore manifestations of place that were historically and politically among the most regressive, static, and exclusionary. Yet there are also narrative renderings of Heimat that can serve as rich case studies for multidimensional textures of place—as theorized in cultural geography.

Pp. 27-48

Earthquake in Haiti: Kleist and the Birth of Modern Disaster Discourse

Isak Winkel Holm

Pp. 49-66

Leaving a Life of Political Violence: A Neo-Nazi Steigt Aus

William Little

Pp. 139-167

The Birth of the “Psychological Jew” in an Age of Ethnic Pride

Noah B. Strote

Pp. 199-224