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- Women in German Yearbook: Feminist Studies in German Literature & Culture
- University of Nebraska Press
- Article
- "Society Is the Biggest Murder Scene of All": On the Private and Public Spheres in Ingeborg Bachmann's Prose Volume 12, 1996, pp. 167-187
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $37.00 USD.
This issue contains 19 articles in total
- Contents of Previous Volumes
- Towards an "American Germanics"?: Editorial Postscript
- Feminist German Studies across the Disciplines: Introduction to Grossmann, Ferree, and Cocks
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- About the Authors
- Now You See It, Now You Don't: Afro-German Particulars and the Making of a Nation in Eva Demski's Afra: Roman in fünf Bildern
- Remembering Eastern Europe: Libuše Moníková
- Interview with Elisabeth Alexander: The Mother Courage of German Postwar Literature
- "Society Is the Biggest Murder Scene of All": On the Private and Public Spheres in Ingeborg Bachmann's Prose
- Renderings of Alice in Wonderland in Postwar German Literature
- Searching for the (M)Other: The Rhetoric of Longing in Post-Holocaust Poems by Nelly Sachs and Rose Ausländer
- Woman as Sexual Criminal: Weimar Constructions of the Criminal Femme Fatale
- Not "until Earth Is Paradise": Louise Otto's Refracted Feminine Ideal
- Epistemological Asymmetries and Erotic Stagings: Father-Daughter Incest in Heinrich von Kleist's The Marquise of O...
- Gender-Bending in the Biedermeier
- On Commonality, Nationalism, and Violence: Hannah Arendt, Rosa Luxemburg, and Frantz Fanon
- Sociological Perspectives on Gender in Germany
- Remarks on Current Trends and Directions in German Women's History
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