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Notes on the Contributors
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction: Closing a Bildungslücke— Genre Fiction and Why It Is Important 1
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Part I. Science Fiction and Dystopia
- 1: German Science Fiction: Its Formative Works and Its Postwar Uses of the Holocaust 29
- 2: A Future-History Out of Time: The Historical Context of Döblin’s Expressionist Dystopian Experiment, Berge Meere und Giganten 49
- 3: Eco-Eschbach: Sustainability in the Science Fiction of Andreas Eschbach 67
-
Part II. Detection and Crime
- 4: Murder in the Weimar Republic: Prejudice, Politics, and the Popular in the Socialist Crime Fiction of Hermynia Zur Mühlen 89
- 5: The Imaginary FBI: Jerry Cotton, the Nazi Roots of the Bundeskriminalamt, and the Cultural Politics of Detective Fiction in West Germany 117
- 6: Justice and Genre: The Krimi as a Site of Memory in Contemporary Germany 133
- 7: Detecting Identity: Reading the Clues in German-Language Crime Fiction by Klüpfel and Kobr and Steinfest 152
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Part III. Versions of the “I”: Pop Literatures on the Way to the Self
- 8: The Pedagogy of Pulp: Liberated Sexuality and Its Consequences through the Eyes of Vicki Baum’s stud. chem. Helene Willfüer 181
- 9: The Kränzchen Library and the Creation of Teenage Identity 207
- 10: Close the Border, Mind the Gap: Pop Misogyny and Social Critique in Christian Kracht’s Faserland 227
- Bibliography 243
- Notes on the Contributors 277
- Index 279
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction: Closing a Bildungslücke— Genre Fiction and Why It Is Important 1
-
Part I. Science Fiction and Dystopia
- 1: German Science Fiction: Its Formative Works and Its Postwar Uses of the Holocaust 29
- 2: A Future-History Out of Time: The Historical Context of Döblin’s Expressionist Dystopian Experiment, Berge Meere und Giganten 49
- 3: Eco-Eschbach: Sustainability in the Science Fiction of Andreas Eschbach 67
-
Part II. Detection and Crime
- 4: Murder in the Weimar Republic: Prejudice, Politics, and the Popular in the Socialist Crime Fiction of Hermynia Zur Mühlen 89
- 5: The Imaginary FBI: Jerry Cotton, the Nazi Roots of the Bundeskriminalamt, and the Cultural Politics of Detective Fiction in West Germany 117
- 6: Justice and Genre: The Krimi as a Site of Memory in Contemporary Germany 133
- 7: Detecting Identity: Reading the Clues in German-Language Crime Fiction by Klüpfel and Kobr and Steinfest 152
-
Part III. Versions of the “I”: Pop Literatures on the Way to the Self
- 8: The Pedagogy of Pulp: Liberated Sexuality and Its Consequences through the Eyes of Vicki Baum’s stud. chem. Helene Willfüer 181
- 9: The Kränzchen Library and the Creation of Teenage Identity 207
- 10: Close the Border, Mind the Gap: Pop Misogyny and Social Critique in Christian Kracht’s Faserland 227
- Bibliography 243
- Notes on the Contributors 277
- Index 279