“Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany

This article examines the notion of “Desintegration” (de-integration), as introduced by German Jewish authors Max Czollek and Sasha Marianna Salzmann, against the backdrop of ongoing re-negotiations of identity, belonging, and “Heimat” (sense of home) in contemporary Germany. While many artistic con...

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Main Author: Maria Roca Lizarazu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/2/42
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spelling doaj-a0771bc57d454bc894508cd4b4ed6a6b2020-11-25T03:32:04ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872020-05-019424210.3390/h9020042“Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary GermanyMaria Roca Lizarazu0Department of Modern Languages, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UKThis article examines the notion of “Desintegration” (de-integration), as introduced by German Jewish authors Max Czollek and Sasha Marianna Salzmann, against the backdrop of ongoing re-negotiations of identity, belonging, and “Heimat” (sense of home) in contemporary Germany. While many artistic contributions to the debates around “Desintegration” have come from the realm of performance art, I will pay special attention to Salzmann’s prize-winning novel Außer Sich (Beyond Myself) (2017), as a literary approximation of the “Desintegration” paradigm, which showcases what I call a “non-authoritative” poetics of non-belonging. I will conclude by showing that the notion of “Desintegration” and its connection to a broader “postmigrant” trajectory enable novel perspectives on three of the central issues discussed in this article: the current location of German Jewish literature and culture; contemporary German-language contestations of “Heimat” and belonging; and the relationship between art and politics.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/2/42German JewishintegrationDesintegrationpostmigrantbelongingidentity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Roca Lizarazu
spellingShingle Maria Roca Lizarazu
“Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany
Humanities
German Jewish
integration
Desintegration
postmigrant
belonging
identity
author_facet Maria Roca Lizarazu
author_sort Maria Roca Lizarazu
title “Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany
title_short “Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany
title_full “Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany
title_fullStr “Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany
title_full_unstemmed “Integration Ist Definitiv Nicht Unser Anliegen, Eher Schon Desintegration”. Postmigrant Renegotiations of Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Germany
title_sort “integration ist definitiv nicht unser anliegen, eher schon desintegration”. postmigrant renegotiations of identity and belonging in contemporary germany
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This article examines the notion of “Desintegration” (de-integration), as introduced by German Jewish authors Max Czollek and Sasha Marianna Salzmann, against the backdrop of ongoing re-negotiations of identity, belonging, and “Heimat” (sense of home) in contemporary Germany. While many artistic contributions to the debates around “Desintegration” have come from the realm of performance art, I will pay special attention to Salzmann’s prize-winning novel Außer Sich (Beyond Myself) (2017), as a literary approximation of the “Desintegration” paradigm, which showcases what I call a “non-authoritative” poetics of non-belonging. I will conclude by showing that the notion of “Desintegration” and its connection to a broader “postmigrant” trajectory enable novel perspectives on three of the central issues discussed in this article: the current location of German Jewish literature and culture; contemporary German-language contestations of “Heimat” and belonging; and the relationship between art and politics.
topic German Jewish
integration
Desintegration
postmigrant
belonging
identity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/2/42
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