Eine neue Solidargemeinschaft? Die soziale Bedeutung der Flucht-und Migrationsliteratur
Abstract
This thesis explores the capacity of literature about
flight and migration to contribute to shaping a community of
solidarity in contemporary German society. It analyses three
novels published after the 2015 refugee “crisis” – Ohrfeige
by Abbas Khider, Gott ist nicht schüchtern by Olga Grjasnowa and
Gehen, ging, gegangen by Jenny Erpenbeck. To examine the impact
of such literature on readers, I apply Rita Felski’s theory
about the uses of literature, and in particular in relation to
the first two novels, its capacity to create shock and deliver
social knowledge. In Ohrfeige, I argue that ‘shock’ is used
as a strategy to arouse uneasiness, in order to encourage
thoughtful listening and understanding about the frustration
experienced by asylum seekers. In Gott ist nicht schüchtern,
readers are encouraged to expand their empathy while negotiating
traumatic stories of war, torture and despair. In the
interpretation of Gehen, ging, gegangen, I apply the theories of
memory studies scholars such as Aleida Assmann and Michael
Rothberg to highlight the parallels between refugees’ memories
of fleeing and Germans’ memories of the Nazi and East German
communist past. These parallel memory spheres resonate with each
other and can lead to critical self-reflection among the German
and European communities. Across these three chapters, this
thesis argues that literature about flight and migration has the
power to evoke empathy towards refugees and strengthen solidarity
across differences in society.
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