04057oam 22004694a 450 991086320120332120241202040514.097894616655469461665547(CKB)32293255600041(OCoLC)1473699338(MdBmJHUP)musev2_119325(NjHacI)9932293255600041(EXLCZ)993229325560004120231222d2024 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEuropean Literatures of Military Occupation : Shared Experience, Shifting Boundaries, and Aesthetic Affections[S.l.] :LEUVEN UNIVERSITY PRESS,2024.©2024.1 online resourceBook collections on Project MUSE ;499789461665911 9461665911 9789462704077 9462704074 Acknowledgments European Literatures of Military Occupation: An Introduction to the Topic and Terminology of the Genre Matthias BuschmeierPART 1 LITERATURE AND THE WORLD: OCCUPATION AS A EUROPEAN EXPERIENCEIntroduction to Part 1 Jeanne E. GlesenerChapter 1. SCARS. Writing on Occupation: The Reality Effect of Narrative and Psychogeographical Space, or The Case of Wil Jeroen OlyslaegersChapter 2. Affective Realism: The Literature of Occupation through Regions and Ages − Vercors' Le Silence de la mer (1942), Willem Frederik Hermans' De donkere kamer van Damokles (1958), and Cătălin Mihuleac's America de peste pogrom (2014) Matthias BuschmeierPART 2 CULTURAL SPACES OF OCCUPATIONIntroduction to Part 2 Jeanne E. GlesenerChapter 3. Military Occupation as Tourism? Griechenland. Ein Buch aus dem Kriege (1942) and Ölberge, Weinberge (1953) by Erhart Kästner Christopher MeidChapter 4. Banished from an Occupied Exile: Rudolf Borchardt's Anabasis Fragment (1944) Jan AndresChapter 5. German Writers as Occupiers and Occupied: Franco-German Representations in the Works of Felix Hartlaub (1940-1941) and Tami Oelfken (1945-1955) Stefanie SiessChapter 6. Literary Representations of Occupied Cities: Tbilisi, Paris, and Luxembourg Atinati MamatsashviliChapter 7. Semantics of Occupation(s) in Pierre Grégoire's Europäische Suite Trilogy: Catholicism, Anticommunism, and the Idea of Luxembourgish Exceptionalism Daniela LiebPART 3 WRITING UNDER/AGAINST OCCUPATION: STRATEGIES OF RESISTANCE AND PROPAGANDAIntroduction to Part 3 Jeanne E. GlesenerChapter 8. Setting the Stage for an Immediate Historicization? Early Sense-Making of the Allied Occupation of Italy between Fictionalized Accounts, War Novels, and Propaganda (1943-1947) Stefan LaffinChapter 9. Literature from Below: Literary Competitions in Serbia (1941-1945) and in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (1939-1945) Aleksandar MomčilovićChapter 10. Translating Occupied Poland into English, 1939-1955 Joanna RzepaChapter 11. How to Handle the New Occupiers? Margret Boveri's Amerikafibel für erwachsene Deutsche: Ein Versuch, Unverstandenes zu erklären (1946) Sandra SchellPART 4 REMEMBERING OCCUPATIONIntroduction to Part 4 Jeanne E. GlesenerChapter 12. "It was over. Düsseldorf was dead"-Narratives of a Renewed Occupation Klaus-Michael BogdalChapter 13. Reflections on Twentieth-Century Military Occupations in Latvian and Estonian Novels Benedikts KalnačsChapter 14. Occupied by Comrades? The Concealed Story of the Soviet Military Presence in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania after 1945 in Uwe Johnson's Jahrestage (1970-1983) Meinolf SchumacherList of Contributors.Military occupationMilitary occupation in literatureMilitary occupation.Military occupation in literature.341.66Buschmeier Matthias1850420MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910863201203321European Literatures of Military Occupation4443473UNINA