Transnational Entanglements: Switzerland's Newly Emerging Literary Culture of the 1960s and the Anglophone World

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_EB8C392DB7FF
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Transnational Entanglements: Switzerland's Newly Emerging Literary Culture of the 1960s and the Anglophone World
Journal
The German Quarterly
Author(s)
Leucht Robert
ISSN
0016-8831 (print)
1756-1183 (electronic)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
92
Number
3
Pages
348-364
Language
english
Abstract
In 1966, Emil Staiger, one of the most prominent literary scholars in literary studies of the postwar era, gave a talk on literature and the public. In his speech, which initiated what came to be known as the Zürcher Literaturstreit, Staiger developed a normative idea of literature as an agent of social cohesion. Around the same time, a new literary culture emerged in Switzerland, one which challenged Staiger's conception by exploring literature's critical potential. This article argues that this more modern direction taken by German Swiss literature was the result of transnational dynamics. Focusing on three examples of literature written by a new generation of Swiss authors (Walter, Federspiel, Bichsel), the article explores the various transnational alliances these authors built with modernist authors, mostly beyond the German‐speaking world, as a means of breaking with literary conventions. Leaving the logic of a national literary history behind, the article argues that seemingly local literary conflicts in 1960s Switzerland arose out of transnational dynamics.
Keywords
Literature and Literary Theory, Cultural Studies, Visual Arts and Performing Arts
Create date
21/11/2020 12:21
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30/03/2023 6:53
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