Konrad Wolf was one of the most enigmatic intellectuals of East Germany. The son of the Jewish Communist playwright Friedrich Wolf and the brother of Markus Wolf—the head of the GDR’s Foreign Intelligence Agency—Konrad Wolf was exiled in Moscow during the Nazi era and returned to Germany as a Red Army soldier by the end of World War Two. This article examines Wolf’s 1968 autobiographical film I was Nineteen (Ich war Neunzehn), which narrates the final days of World War II—and the initial formation of postwar reality—from the point of view of an exiled German volunteer in the Soviet Army. In analyzing Wolf’s portrayals of the German landscape, I argue that he used the audio-visual clichés of Heimat-symbolism in order to undermine the sense o...
During the Second World War, Nazi and Soviet governments had distinctly different ideologies as well...
One-fifth of the postwar West German population consisted of German refugees expelled from the forme...
This article returns to a question posed by Andreas Huyssen (and others), namely whether and how min...
Konrad Wolf was one of the most enigmatic intellectuals of East Germany. The son of the Jewish Commu...
Recent German debates about remembering World War II have raised the question of whether German suff...
The article offers a close reading of Konrad Wolf’s anti-fascist Second World War film 'Mama, ich le...
Leslie A. Adelson, Isabel V. Hull, Anette SchwarzAs a result of two world wars, decolonization, and ...
The National Socialist regime’s policies of discrimination, territorial expansion and genocide, and ...
Even 24 years after the Fall of the Berlin Wall, modern day Germans are still preoccupied with the c...
The murder of six million Jews during the Holocaust necessitated a need to reestablish a Jewish pres...
Die Blechtrommel and Kindheitsmuster present, comparatively, in relation to their specific authors a...
In works of film history many pages have been written on the representation of World War II and th...
At the close of World War II, Germany was faced with the task of digging itself out from under enorm...
This article is concerned with issues of nation, landscape, and identity in narratives of exile and ...
Taking as its starting point Konrad Wolf’s film Sterne (Stars), the first German film to deal with t...
During the Second World War, Nazi and Soviet governments had distinctly different ideologies as well...
One-fifth of the postwar West German population consisted of German refugees expelled from the forme...
This article returns to a question posed by Andreas Huyssen (and others), namely whether and how min...
Konrad Wolf was one of the most enigmatic intellectuals of East Germany. The son of the Jewish Commu...
Recent German debates about remembering World War II have raised the question of whether German suff...
The article offers a close reading of Konrad Wolf’s anti-fascist Second World War film 'Mama, ich le...
Leslie A. Adelson, Isabel V. Hull, Anette SchwarzAs a result of two world wars, decolonization, and ...
The National Socialist regime’s policies of discrimination, territorial expansion and genocide, and ...
Even 24 years after the Fall of the Berlin Wall, modern day Germans are still preoccupied with the c...
The murder of six million Jews during the Holocaust necessitated a need to reestablish a Jewish pres...
Die Blechtrommel and Kindheitsmuster present, comparatively, in relation to their specific authors a...
In works of film history many pages have been written on the representation of World War II and th...
At the close of World War II, Germany was faced with the task of digging itself out from under enorm...
This article is concerned with issues of nation, landscape, and identity in narratives of exile and ...
Taking as its starting point Konrad Wolf’s film Sterne (Stars), the first German film to deal with t...
During the Second World War, Nazi and Soviet governments had distinctly different ideologies as well...
One-fifth of the postwar West German population consisted of German refugees expelled from the forme...
This article returns to a question posed by Andreas Huyssen (and others), namely whether and how min...