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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 1986
    Titel der Quelle: New German Critique
    Angaben zur Quelle: 38 (1986) 3-27
    Keywords: Fassbinder, Rainer Werner, ; Theater ; Antisemitism in literature ; Jews in literature ; German drama History and criticism ; Frankfurt am Main (Germany) In literature
    Abstract: A discussion between three Jewish scholars, held at the Center for European Studies at Harvard University in December 1985, on Fassbinder's play and Jewish reactions to it. Markovits discusses the experiences of his Jewish relatives in postwar Germany - their alienation, their benefits from the so-called "Auschwitz bonus" (exploitation of German guilt), and their avoidance of political controversy until the Fassbinder affair. Fassbinder’s play reflected local politics and conflicting attitudes within the Left toward urban modernization. A peculiar alliance of conservative circles, trade unions, some liberals, and the Jewish community opposed its production. Benhabib views the play as an indictment of modernization, showing the solidarity between its victims - outsiders, prostitutes, and Jews. She analyzes the text, criticizing Fassbinder for not clarifying his own stance against the prejudices expressed by some of the characters. Postone gives the local background to the controversy, the contention over housing in Frankfurt, which involved some Jewish speculators, and the superficial attitude of the New Left toward antisemitism. Conservative circles, usually unsympathetic to Jewish concerns, found in Fassbinder an easy target.
    Note: Record created automatically from multi-article record # 000085405
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 1986
    Titel der Quelle: New German Critique
    Angaben zur Quelle: 38 (1986) 39-56
    Keywords: Fassbinder, Rainer Werner, ; Jews History 1945- ; Antisemitism ; Antisemitism in literature ; Jews in literature ; German drama History and criticism ; Frankfurt am Main (Germany) In literature
    Abstract: Analyzes arguments of the mainly left-wing supporters of the production of Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s play "Garbage, the City and Death" in Frankfurt. They accused conservatives and Jews, who opposed the performance of the play, of hypocrisy and evasion of open discussion of antisemitism, speaking in the name of "normality". States, however, that the leftists are also hypocritical. Their accusations that the Jewish community was threatening free speech and protecting "financial speculation" (referring to the housing crisis in Frankfurt, which is the motif of this play) recall traditional left-wing stereotypes of the all-powerful Jewish capitalists. For the Left, "normality" means freedom to attack Jews without being accused of antisemitism, and the belief that they know what is in the Jews’ best interests.
    Note: Record created automatically from multi-article record # 000085405
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