Showing posts with label The Holdovers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Holdovers. Show all posts

Thursday, February 1, 2024

Post Catastrophic Narratives: Memory and Post Memory in German Literature after 1945 - Update

Here are my highlights and notes. At the top I put the most meaningful idea, for me anyway, from the book. I am excited to begin the novels. 

"The Enlightenment faith in progress is shattered, and consecutive, redemptive time is annihilated. The Holocaust as absolute discontinuity and break in civilization has destroyed humanity’s earlier conception of itself. A realm of negativity, unrelieved by any hope and therefore timeless in its condemnation, is all that is left."

 

The Language of Silence: West German Literature and the Holocaust

Ernestine Schlant

Last accessed on Wednesday January 31, 2024

91 Highlight(s) | 14 Note(s)

It is my contention that in its approach to the Holocaust, the West German literature of four decades has been a literature of absence and silence contoured by language.

the enormity of these crimes and their legacy have become part of German self-understanding.

This study is premised on the privileged position of literature as the seismograph of a people’s moral positions.

 

literature is the seismograph of a people’s conscience,

 

Theodor Adorno, the eminent social philosopher and a returned exile, stated that “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric.”

They explained this need for an idealized leader as resulting from a historically conditioned weak national ego that sought refuge in obedience, resented this obedience, and overcame the aversion to it by increased idealization of the leader to whom it was obedient (22) and with whom it identified narcissistically

 

Yet this avoidance came at great cost.

 

“what happens to the individual may not be purely individual, for it may be bound up with larger social, political, and cultural processes that often go unperceived.”

Note: Social psych

 

 

despite increasingly available knowledge about the Holocaust, Germans individually and collectively have been unable to work through and to mourn the crimes

The Holocaust has shattered all previous assumptions about the nature of humankind and the perfectibility of society, creating, in the words of the Israeli and German historian Dan Diner, a “break in civilization.”

Note: And post modern lit

 

 

“it may well be that [deconstruction] has arisen as an attempt to come to terms with the holocaust as a radical disruption produced as a logical extension of Western thinking.”

This desire for continuity can be seen as an attempt to deny the radical break constituted by the Holocaust.

 

Alexander Kluge radically subverted the supposed objectivity of documents, showing that even documents are manmade and hence serve the specific interests of those who create them.

Early postwar literature, whether as “literature of the rubble” or on its quasimystical journey, focused predominantly not on the Nazi atrocities but on the wartime and postwar travails of the German population.

 

indicts all of German society, in the sense that they continue their compulsive work, value order and cleanliness above any warmth or human contact, and act as if the past ten years had not happened.

Böll’s protagonist is representative of the many other “lowly” Germans who pretended ignorance because they felt powerless against the Nazi regime; they were afraid of shedding their passivity and ended by creating a complicity of silence.

the answer of the epigraph takes refuge in an alibi that seemingly submerges the individual in the enormity of the world war.

circles the problem of the individual’s responsibility in confrontation with an overwhelming machinery without a conclusion:

 

When the young officer sees the tailor in his environment, he sees what the author has been taught to see. The brief description of the old Jew and of the townspeople is unreflected, and this lack of critical reflection demonstrates precisely the power of indoctrinated stereotypes.

The ambivalence of the answer to the question “And where were you, Adam?” which uses the overwhelming power of the war as an excuse for what was done, is here particularly poignant,

There remains, however, an inherent irresolution: the question addressed to “Adam” as an individual is answered with the alibi of war. Yet “war,” as Böll shows in this novel, is not only the all-embracing, monolithic event that smashes the innocent victims like Ilona and Feinhals. “War” is also composed of the many actions of individuals, and these individuals have options, as Böll shows in the drivers of the van.

the Catholic Böll could include Jews among Hitler’s victims only when they were converted, female, and unattached. That this should be the case in a writer with an acute moral conscience shows how deeply ingrained and unconscious the prejudices against Jews were and how silently they operated.

His preference for a sophisticated literary language and techniques that reconnected to the little beloved Weimar Republic reminded his German readers that they had welcomed Hitler as one who would replace the chaos of democracy and avant-gardism with the order of dictatorship,

 

high-ranking members of the Nazi regime, including the military, qualified for sizable pensions, while inmates of concentration camps received minimal restitution.

Note: yikes

 

Koeppen anticipates the debates on post-Enlightenment that would focus on the shattering realization that the Holocaust has destroyed Enlightenment faith in progress.

Koeppen radically insists on discontinuity in face of the continuity that has appeared to carry the day; he all but abandons any hope that the Germans will ever come to reflect on the Nazi past, let alone mourn it or work through it. Koeppen’s conclusion is stark: the Germans are already dead and inhabitants of hell.

these crimes will not go away and will haunt future generations in their attempts at self-definition.

The nihilism, hopelessness, and despair that many have seen in this novel result not only from the realization of the enormity of the crimes but from the desire to annihilate oneself in response to them.

 

Koeppen’s novel has been interpreted, along the lines of postwar existentialism, as an expression of Sinnlosigkeit, an existential meaninglessness.

it seems to be the only response possible to a realization of the atrocities of the Holocaust and the current political maneuverings.

Note: poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric - Adorno

 

 

The Enlightenment faith in progress is shattered, and consecutive, redemptive time is annihilated. The Holocaust as absolute discontinuity and break in civilization has destroyed humanity’s earlier conception of itself. A realm of negativity, unrelieved by any hope and therefore timeless in its condemnation, is all that is left.

 

The Eichmann trial of 1961 in Jerusalem and the Auschwitz trials from 1963 to 1965 in Frankfurt/Main made public the atrocities of the Holocaust. The dramatic courtroom testimonies were of an immediacy and directness that left no room for repression, and the historical documentation and the authority of the witnesses allowed for no evasion or subterfuge.

 

chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger in his state of the nation address in 1968; Kiesinger tried to defuse criticism of the United States’ escalating war in Vietnam by saying: “We especially have not the slightest reason to lord it over the United States.” Martin Walser, who reports this incident, then editorializes: “Which means, of course: we have committed genocide, they are committing genocide, and one crow should not pluck out the eyes of another one.”6

 

He dismisses the differences between literary and documentary texts to show how any sort of discourse expresses the interests of those who create it.

 

Portraying an individual in the environment that shapes him/her requires an enormous amount of information on the diverse aspects of the individual’s societal existence. Moreover, each bit of information is itself “interested” in that it has invariably been put together by someone or some entity with a specific point of view, so that to arrive at any factuality innumerable fragments are needed to supplement and/or counterbalance each other.

Kluge’s undermining of the narrative boundary between “documents” and “fiction” further reflects his skepticism about the “narratability” of events, scenes, portraits—a skepticism premised on what the historian Hayden White calls “cognitive disorientation and a despair at ever being able to identify the elements of the events in order to render possible an ‘objective’ analysis of their causes and consequences,

Note: we are bound by perspective, no person can take a god's eye view of events or history.

 

 

Despite the narrative fragmentations and the discontinuities associated with it, the Holocaust demands the adoption of a moral position.

Note: As an amoralist, I disagree. We can confront the Holocaust from a public health perspective, and from an ethical-relativist perspective.

 

Kluge here presents the dialectics of individual responsibility versus the safety (even enjoyment) of anonymous obedience and shows that both shirk responsibility for their acts.

 

a camp administrator in the grip of capitalist thinking when the man inveighs against the loss of human energy because the prisoners have to stand by the hour in freezing weather; he does not want a more humane but a more energy efficient treatment of the prisoners. Yet this sketch can serve to refute the Marxist claim that fascism is a late-stage development of capitalism, because, as the example shows, the madness of Nazism could not

 

be tamed by considerations of economic efficiency.

he has a theory about what made the war with its disasters possible; he finds in imperialism as a late phase of capitalism a shortcircuited answer that allows him to demonstrate how in a system of technological and economic predominance people become functionalized.

Picaros— socially peripheral characters, who have the power to observe but lack the commitment or the knowhow to take a stand—were a widely preferred character choice in early postwar fiction, and irony was the preferred mode of presentation.

 

recognizes Auschwitz (and by extension all the concentration and extermination camps) as “a deep and irredeemable rupture in the history of civilization.”

 

Grass seems hopeful that Germany may learn, at a snail’s pace, to be a genuine democracy, and that it will slowly shed its fanaticism and intolerant idealism, which, in the narrator’s terms, brought about the disaster of the Holocaust.

 

paradoxes in the relation of the two generations: while the young vehemently attack the parent generation, the two generations are tied together in their self-perception as “victims” who cannot be held accountable for their deeds. The older generation saw itself as “duped” and “betrayed,” and thus victimized, by Hitler and Nazism;

 

All the narrators are socially aware enough to know that

authoritarianism and obedience to mindless and brutal treatment is inculcated by education (in school as well as in the home) and through the internalization of social pressures and roles.

Note: Social psych

 

Why don’t the narrators subject these clichés to critical analysis? Why don’t they investigate how these clichés serve as alibis and placebos? Here, perhaps, was a missed opportunity for the younger generation to learn instead of judge, to listen instead of accuse, and to feel sorrow for themselves as the children of these mechanized parents, sorrow for the parents, and ultimately sorrow for the victims and shame for what had been done to them. But this road was too arduous for those traveling with the heavy baggage of anger and fury; indeed, the heavy baggage could serve as a demonstration of “good intentions” and simultaneously as an excuse not to look any further. As a result, the younger generation remained as locked in their position as were the parents in theirs.

Note:yikes

 

 

Ortheil’s writings attest to an undiminished need to arrive at a definition of self against the background of the Nazi regime.

 

Before coming to any understanding of the historical past, Fermer must overcome the authoritarian conditioning of his own personality.

Ortheil relates Fermer’s six-month journey under the guiding principle of two qualities that permeate German society and that establish a continuity from prewar to postwar times: they are order or orderliness and Geborgenheit, a complex noun that denotes the sense of well-being that comes from feeling sheltered and protected.

 

One of the merits of Fermer is the demonstration that no personal characteristic or act is merely personal; characteristics and acts have social implications and political results that may, in the end, even be contrary to their initial purpose.

Note:social psych and also why personal beliefs are a public health issue.

 

 

The successor generations are thus imprinted not only with the fear of chaos but with the desire for protection from chaos in Geborgenheit, and with the means by which this chaos is tamed—namely, rigid order.

 

he must learn to recognize as temptation (and reject) the conviction that rigid order is necessary and that compliance with the established order promises comfort and Geborgenheit.

 

he comes to understand the “pleasant feelings” culminating in Geborgenheit as a cover-up for a deeply hidden fear—the fear of independence, of personal responsibility, of open-endedness.

the establishment of barriers cannot safeguard Geborgenheit, since the fears and concealments come from within.

 

the relation between the two words also suggests that one feels safe and comfortable only when one is hidden away.

they know that their youth is conditioned, even traumatized by their parents’ past.

Instead, one acquired a kind of inner protection, a delicately woven enclosure made up of reading, cultured education and lifestyle”

Note: bildung

 

The narrator here implicitly projects the mother-son relationship onto the political plane, where an entire nation was willingly seduced and protected, therefore less horrified at “the most horrible things,

the father’s story of the night reconnaissance covers an underlying secret that nevertheless reveals its presence; the story’s function is to hide what he saw, and the act of hiding leaves its traces.

 

In bad moments it appeared to me as if human history, with these persecutions, had come to its end.

Note: Adorno and death of Renaissance progress

 

The split of narrative consciousness into dialoguing voices; the displacement of events as if seen through the wrong end of a telescope and, alternatively, the magnification of certain moments into epiphanies of exquisite simplicity or shocking horror; and the tensions created between subjective experience, intense remembrance, and a distanced, becalmed narrative all suggest the deliberations of a literary practitioner.

 

For those who demand a description of “that” in all its horrifying aspects, Lenz will fall short, for he is not a chronicler of events but a chronicler of how the events affect the individual.

Note:which is all one CAN describe - there exists no god's eye view of events, there is no true objectivity.

 

 

Lenz is in fact an author with post-Holocaust sensitivities. He knows that he cannot describe “that. Just the way it is” and continually alerts the reader that his (and his protagonist’s) position is one of subjectivity.

 

Rather, the novel presents a constant challenge, urging the reader to ask the very questions that the protagonist has already answered with his (passive) behavior. What, except passive resistance, was possible under Nazism for someone already marked by withdrawal from the world into an inner-directed counterreality?

 

“them”

Note:Das man, the they, everywhere and nowhere

 

This minute scene raises the very question that has haunted postwar attempts to look at the German past: why were so many people so prepared to cooperate with the Nazis even when they were not coerced?

 

We have no standard anymore for anything, ever since human life is no longer the standard.

 

Gert Hofmann burrows deeply into the consequences of denunciations as they are inscribed upon the victims and as they destroy not just individual lives but the very concept of a common humanity.

The overabundance of “chaotic forces” and fragments jammed into a time frame that is “tight to burst” enacts Hofmann’s stringent subordination of phenomenal reality to the demands of artistic autonomy.

 

the culprits of the past era may no longer be alive, their practices—and with them the attitudes and values on which these practices are based—have survived

Hofmann demands more than an exploration of the past and the identification of culprits. He demands implicitly that old practices such as the violation of another person’s humanity should cease, but he gives no glimmer of hope that this will occur.

 

the Holocaust and its manifold practices of destruction beginning with the most insidious denunciations, and with the continued violation of another person’s humanity in the present, the world as a human universe has ceased to exist.

The omission of the ten most crucial and painful years in the history of the destruction of the Jews demonstrates what Klaus Briegleb meant when he spoke of “a falling silent exactly when Jews and their annihilation are concerned” and convicts the novel in Guy Stern’s definition of literary anti-Semitism as “an omission of a declaration of sympathy for Jewish suffering” when such an omission “would strike a neutral reader as a palpable gap in a literary work.”

Hofmann here makes it clear that when people act “as if he no longer existed,” soon thereafter he indeed will cease to exist, and he shows how quickly the victim gets blamed so that the culprit can feel blameless.

 

Hofmann has, in Veilchenfeld, restituted personal identity to a degree neither Andersch nor Härtling could manage. This is accomplished in the dual perspective that underlies Hans’s intimate observations: guided by his contacts with his parents and the townspeople, he sees Veilchenfeld as “other,” but he also, unknowingly, portrays Veilchenfeld’s humanity and shows in concrete scenes what it meant to be a Jew in Germany at that time.

 

The accuracy and poignancy of the details and the intensity of sympathy generated in witnessing the humiliation and crushing of an individual is in my opinion unique in West German literature.

 

the realization that the cold war had made West Germany a valuable partner of the Allies, created a cynical and self-righteous mood that helped the postwar citizenry to repress all that was inconvenient to remember.

 

the Historikerstreit was fought over the control of history—over what interpretation of the Nazi regime and the Holocaust would best serve German self-perceptions.

 

he concluded that Auschwitz constitutes so deep a caesura that the history of humankind must now be dated as pre-and post Auschwitz.

 

He tried to address the fact that Auschwitz and the crimes committed there remain incomprehensible and was now adamant in embracing collective guilt: “I believe one is a criminal when the society to which one belongs commits criminal acts.

And he asks a question at the core of much contemporary engagement with the Holocaust: “How far removed does a person have to be for his descendants to be no longer connected to him?”

In Schneider’s view, “coupling” involves acceptance and responsibility (as when Eduard, on a personal level, accepts fatherhood and commitment to his newly constituted family) and that includes acceptance of and a sense of responsibility for the Nazi past.

The argument does not destroy their friendship, but it points to the fragility inherent in any German-Jewish coupling.

All four narratives continue the techniques and express the post-Holocaust worldview associated with fragmentation, disruption, severance, destruction of sequence, and a closed universe devoid of hope.

The memoirs of her childhood and young adult life in Steinach and Bad Kissingen, where Jews had lived since “at least as far back as the late seventeenth century” (193) are a monument to the Jewish culture in which she grew up. Her memoirs come from the other side of the Holocaust, as memoirs of a culture now destroyed and recorded to conjure up a counterworld in the face of annihilation. They are the last testimony to pre-Holocaust life in Germany. Sebald does not usurp the mother’s voice or persona but respects the voice of the “other” as it celebrates her own culture and simultaneously mourns its destruction.12 Ferber’s handing these memoirs over to the narrator is not only a sign of friendship and personal trust but a survivor’s charge to the successor generations to honor and value what is left of the Jewish heritage.

Sebald sees the “constant condition of melancholy” connected to “the insight into the impossibility of redemption

Note:How do we live if there is no salvation or redemption? A fortiori, why do we need redeemed?

 

 

No less industrious than the generations preceding them, German teenagers now work as hard at constructing memorials as their parents did in rebuilding the country after the war, as their grandparents did in building the Third Reich itself.

 

debate militates against forgetting.

This “epidemic of commemorating” is an indication that the Holocaust has become part of Germany’s—albeit conflicted— historical self-understanding.


Friday, January 19, 2024

Post Catastrophic Narratives: Memory and Post Memory in German Literature after 1945

 It appears I won't be teaching this semester.

Was it something I said?

Probably.

So instead of letting my mind, what's left of it, go to waste, I have decided to plow into the syllabus from a Brown German Studies course, Post Catastrophic Narratives: Memory and Post Memory in German Literature after 1945.

GRMN 2662P. Postcatastrophic Narratives: Memory and Postmemory in German Literature after 1945. German culture after 1945 is determined by a changing relation toward its past: the horrors of National Socialism. This past was repressed, then gradually recognized, until it emerged as an essential part of German identity & politics in the 1980s. Literature played a role as a counter-memory of what had been officially forgotten, adopting a radically modern aesthetics to engage with Adorno’s dictum that writing poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric. Literature attempts to represent the unrepresentable, developing a different poetics of memory and postmemory, in part with a political dimension that finds echoes in today’s postcolonial debates. After an introduction to the historical context & clarification of key concepts such as trauma, postmemory, & the politics of memory, we will discuss seminal texts by Paul Celan, W. G. Sebald, Alexander Kluge, Wolfgang Koeppen, Peter Weiss, Heiner Müller, Uwe Johnson & others


I've started with Ernestine Schlant's book, The Languages of Silence, 1997.

And wow. 

Immediately I see connection to my German History rabbit hole of the past year coming to fruition. Schlant references the the Adorno line: Writing poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric, but what hit me harder was how the Holocaust confronted (and destroyed) the Enlightenment idea that humanity is progressing, especially as it is laid bare in Wolfgang Koeppen's Death In Rome.

It must be so uncomfortable to confront the barbarity of our species. To speak of it honestly and authentically takes courage and, honestly, some sort of thick skin I can't really fathom.

Another thought is how I previously discovered Sebald's Austerlitz via an interview with the incredible Paul Beatty, who set his Slumberland in Berlin.

I know you're dying to know how this goes so I'll be sure to post often in this sabbatical of sorts.

Be well my friends, and please remember the line from The Holdovers, "Life for a lot of people is like a hen house ladder: shitty and short."



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