"<i>Post-Fascist Fantasie</i>s is an exciting, provocative, powerful text. Brilliantly crafted and sustained with energy, it is an exemplary work of scholarship and theory. Reading it is an intellectually and aesthetically pleasurable experience from beginning to end."—Angelika Bammer, Emory University
"Instead of falling back on tired theories of totalitarianism, Hell offers a highly literate and literary analysis of the ‘ideological fantasies’ that underlie the literature of the GDR."— Patricia A. Herminghouse, University of Rochester
By focusing on the unconscious fantasies about post-fascist body and post-fascist voice that suffuse the texts of Wolf and others, Hell radically reconceptualizes the notion of the author’s subjective authenticity. Since this notion occupies a key position in previous literary-historical accounts of East German culture, Hell’s psychoanalytic approach problematizes the established literary model of an "authentic feminine voice" that gradually liberates itself from the GDR’s dominant ideological narrative. Far from operating solely on a narrowly political level, the novels of Wolf and others were intricate family sagas portraying psychic structures linked in complex ways to the GDR’s social dynamics. Hell traces this link through East German literatrure’s dominant narrative, a paternal narrative organized around the figure of the Communist father as antifascist hero.
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Julia Hell is Associate Professor of Germanic Languages and Literature at the University of Michigan.