Writing the Revolution
The Construction of 1968 in Germany
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Word Count
82,000 words, Guess
Page Count
328 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-139781571139542
- ISBN-101571139540
- Library of Congress Control Number2016010607
- OCLC Control Number956378950
- Better World Books9781571139542
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL28605176M
Classifications
- LCCDD260.4.C66 2016
- LCCDD260.4 .C66 2016
Description
In Germany, the concept of "1968" is enduring and synonymous with the German Student Movement, and is viewed, variously, as a fundamental liberalization, a myth, a second foundation, or an irritation. The movement's aims-radical re-imagination of the political and economic order and social hierarchy-have been understood as requiring a "long march." While the movement has been judged at best a "successful failure," cultural elites continue to engage in the construction of 1968. Ingo Cornils's book argues that writing about 1968 in Germany is no longer about the historical events or the specific objectives of a bygone counterculture, but is instead a moral touchstone, a marker of social group identity meant to keep alive (or at bay) a utopian agenda that continues to fire the imagination. The book demonstrates that the representation of 1968 as a "foundational myth" suits the needs of a number of surprisingly heterogeneous groups, and that even attempts to deconstruct the myth strengthen it. Cornils brings together for the first time the historical, literary, and media representations of the movement, showing the motivation behind and effect of almost five decades of writing about 1968. In so doing, Cornils challenges the way 1968 has been instrumentalized: as a powerful imaginary that has colonized every aspect of life in Germany, and as symbolic capital in cultural and political debates.
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Other Editions
- Writing the Revolution
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