ABSTRACT

In German Cinema – Terror and Trauma Since 1945, Thomas Elsaesser reevaluates the meaning of the Holocaust for postwar German films and culture, while offering a reconsideration of trauma theory today. Elsaesser argues that Germany's attempts at "mastering the past" can be seen as both a failure and an achievement, making it appropriate to speak of an ongoing 'guilt management' that includes not only Germany, but Europe as a whole. In a series of case studies, which consider the work of Konrad Wolf, Alexander Kluge, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Herbert Achterbusch and Harun Farocki, as well as films made in the new century, Elsaesser tracks the different ways the Holocaust is present in German cinema from the 1950s onwards, even when it is absent, or referenced in oblique and hyperbolic ways. Its most emphatically "absent presence" might turn out to be the compulsive afterlife of the Red Army Faction, whose acts of terror in the 1970s were a response to—as well as a reminder of—Nazism’s hold on the national imaginary. Since the end of the Cold War and 9/11, the terms of the debate around terror and trauma have shifted also in Germany, where generational memory now distributes the roles of historical agency and accountability differently. Against the background of universalized victimhood, a cinema of commemoration has, if anything, confirmed the violence that the past continues to exert on the present, in the form of missed encounters, retroactive incidents, unintended slippages and uncanny parallels, which Elsaesser—reviving the full meaning of Freud’s Fehlleistung—calls the parapractic performativity of cultural memory.

chapter |29 pages

Introduction

Terror and Trauma

part |122 pages

Terror, Trauma, Parapraxis

chapter |21 pages

Terror and Trauma

Siamese Twins of the Political Discourse

chapter |40 pages

Memory Frames and Witnessing

Burdens of Representation and Holocaust Films

chapter |21 pages

The Politics and Poetics of Parapraxis

On Some Problems of Representation in the New German Cinema

chapter |38 pages

Generational Memory

The RAF Afterlife in the New Century

part |107 pages

Parapractic Poetics in German Films and Cinema

chapter |18 pages

Rescued in Vain

Parapraxis and Deferred Action in Konrad Wolf's Stars

chapter |26 pages

Retroactive Causality and the Present

Fassbinder's The Third Generation

chapter |30 pages

Mourning as Mimicry and Masquerade

Herbert Achternbusch's the Last Hole

part |63 pages

Trauma Theory Reconsidered

chapter |43 pages

From Mastering the Past to Managing Guilt

Holocaust Memory in the New Century

chapter |18 pages

Postscript to Trauma Theory

A Parapractic Supplement