Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Developing a Nomadic Ethics
- 1 Seeing Strangely: Birgit Vanderbeke's Ways of Knowing
- 2 Creature Comforts: Economadism in the Work of Dorothea Grünzweig
- 3 Disorientations: Queer, East German Nomadism in the Work of Antje Rávic Strubel
- 4 Uncanny Returns: Anna Mitgutsch's Austrian Nomadic Postmemory
- 5 Facing the Other: Barbara Honigmann and Jewish Nomadic Ethics
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Disorientations: Queer, East German Nomadism in the Work of Antje Rávic Strubel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Developing a Nomadic Ethics
- 1 Seeing Strangely: Birgit Vanderbeke's Ways of Knowing
- 2 Creature Comforts: Economadism in the Work of Dorothea Grünzweig
- 3 Disorientations: Queer, East German Nomadism in the Work of Antje Rávic Strubel
- 4 Uncanny Returns: Anna Mitgutsch's Austrian Nomadic Postmemory
- 5 Facing the Other: Barbara Honigmann and Jewish Nomadic Ethics
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Will there be a place for my life?
— Judith Butler, Undoing GenderWho knows where we might turn[?]
— Sara Ahmed, Queer PhenomenologyQueer, East German Nomadism
We have seen how nomadism involves a challenge to masculinist ways of knowing and to arrogant humanism. In this chapter, I introduce the idea of queer nomadism, which opposes both nationalism and heterosexism. Drawing on Sara Ahmed' ideas concerning orientation to read the work of Antje Rávic Strubel, I argue that Strubel' works practice an aesthetics of disorientation. This disorientation is bound up with and expressive of a specifically post-Wende, East German form of trouble, as we will see.
Antje Strubel was born in Potsdam in 1974, and grew up in Lud-wigsfelde in the GDR. After leaving school in 1992, she trained to be a bookseller. From 1994, Strubel studied American studies, psychology, and literature at Potsdam University and at New York University. She worked as a lighting technician at Wings Theater in New York. She gained her master' degree in 2001, and is now based in Potsdam, spending much time in Sweden, where she owned a house for a while. Offene Blende (Aperture), her first novel, appeared in 2001 and attracted praise. It was followed by six further novels and a guidebook to Sweden. Strubel has also translated into German Joan Didion' memoir, The Year of Magical Thinking, and other writings by Didion. I view Strubel' work as both “queer” and “nomadic,” and discuss these terms now, exploring their possible convergences as well as how they interlock with the question of (East) Germanness.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Nomadic Ethics in Contemporary Women's Writing in GermanStrange Subjects, pp. 98 - 131Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012