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After the Red Army Faction

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Analyzing the afterimage of revolutionary violence in contemporary culture and politics.Utopia or Auschwitz: Germany’s 1968 Generation and the Holocaust
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  • 16 December 2014
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Masterminded by women, the Red Army Faction (RAF) terrorized West Germany from the 1970s to the 1990s. Afterimages of its leaders persist in the works of pivotal artists and writers, including Gerhard Richter, Elfriede Jelinek, and Slavoj Žižek. Why were women so prominent in the RAF? What does the continuing cultural response to the German armed struggle tell us about the representation of violence, power, and gender today? Engaging critical theory, Charity Scribner addresses these questions and analyzes signal works that point beyond militancy and terrorism. This literature and art discloses the failures of the Far Left and registers the radical potential that RAF women actually forfeited.

After the Red Army Faction maps out a cultural history of militancy and introduces "postmilitancy" as a new critical term. As Scribner demonstrates, the most compelling examples of postmilitant culture don't just repudiate militancy: these works investigate its horizons of possibility, particularly on the front of sexual politics. Objects of analysis include as-yet untranslated essays by Theodor Adorno and Jürgen Habermas, as well as novels by Friedrich Dürrenmatt and Judith Kuckart, Johann Kresnik's Tanztheaterstück Ulrike Meinhof, and the blockbuster exhibition Regarding Terror at the Berlin Kunst-Werke. Scribner focuses on German cinema, offering incisive interpretations of films by Margarethe von Trotta, Volker Schlöndorff, and Fatih Akin, as well as the international box-office success The Baader-Meinhof Complex. These readings disclose dynamic junctures among several fields of inquiry: national and sexual identity, the disciplining of the militant body, and the relationship between mass media and the arts.

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Price: $65.00
Pages: 312
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 16 December 2014
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231168649
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ART / History / 20th & 21st Century, PERFORMING ARTS / Dance / General, HISTORY / Europe / Germany, PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Critical Theory, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Feminism & Feminist Theory, PHILOSOPHY / Political, POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / European

The saga of the Red Army Faction's decades-long war with the West German state hardly ended when the shooting stopped, as Charity Scribner's superb book explains. Instead, the conflict captured and even haunted the imagination of generations of German novelists, filmmakers, and visual artists, whose diverse works are themselves an integral part of the RAF's legacy. Scribner offers both incisive and inventive readings of an array of texts, showing how they labored — and often struggled — to articulate a post-militant politics to move beyond the moral hazards of armed struggle. After the Red Army Faction dramatically expands our understanding of what it means to "read" violence and come to terms with its many wounds.
Charity Scribner is an associate professor at the City University of New York, where she teaches comparative literature at the Graduate Center and LaGuardia Community College. She is also the author of Requiem for Communism.

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Beyond Militancy
Part 1. Militant Acts
1. The Red Decade and Its Cultural Fallout
2. Damaged Lives of the Far Left: Reading the RAF in Reverse
3. Buildings on Fire: The Situationist International and the Red Army Faction
Part II. Postmilitant Culture
4. The Stammheim Complex in Marianne and Juliane
5. Violence and the Tendenzwende: Engendering Victims in the Novel and Film
6. Anatomies of Protest and Resistance: Meinhof, Fischer
7. Regarding Terror at the Berlin Kunst-Werke
Afterword: Signs of a New Season
Notes
Works Cited
Index