Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Inheriting the Social-Justice Legacy of the 1968 Generation
- Part II Social Justice Matters in Popular Culture
- 3 Social Injustice in the German Tatort Television Series
- 4 Die Toten Hosen, Rammstein, Azad, and Massiv: German Rock and Rap Go Global for Social Justice
- 5 Critical Voices from the Underground: Street Art and Urban Transformation in Berlin
- Part III Eastern German Views of Social Justice in Novels and Films
- Part IV Theater as an Interventionist Medium for Promoting Social Justice
- Part V Beyond Germany's Borders: Social-Justice Issues in a Global Context
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
3 - Social Injustice in the German Tatort Television Series
from Part II - Social Justice Matters in Popular Culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Inheriting the Social-Justice Legacy of the 1968 Generation
- Part II Social Justice Matters in Popular Culture
- 3 Social Injustice in the German Tatort Television Series
- 4 Die Toten Hosen, Rammstein, Azad, and Massiv: German Rock and Rap Go Global for Social Justice
- 5 Critical Voices from the Underground: Street Art and Urban Transformation in Berlin
- Part III Eastern German Views of Social Justice in Novels and Films
- Part IV Theater as an Interventionist Medium for Promoting Social Justice
- Part V Beyond Germany's Borders: Social-Justice Issues in a Global Context
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
TELEVISION CRIME SERIES AND CRIME NOVELS have a long tradition in Germany, and, as James W. Jones has written, a “secure place within German popular culture” (570). Both television crime series and crime novels are referred to in German as Krimi, which is the abbreviation of Kriminalfilm and Kriminalroman (detective film and detective story). The long-running crime television series Tatort (Crime Scene), first broadcast in West Germany in 1970, is one of the most popular and controversial crime series in the German-speaking countries. East Germany had its own crime series called Polizeiruf 110 (Police Call 110), and after German unification in 1990, both series continued to be broadcast. Tatort is always aired on Sunday at 8:15 p.m. but sometimes on a Monday as well if it is a public holiday. Each of the TV channels of ARD (Germany), as well as ORF (Austria) and SF (Switzerland), produces the show in its local setting. On an alternating basis, episodes are filmed in eighteen different locales, both rural and urban, in Germany, and one each in Austria and Switzerland, with the main characters (the investigators) varying with the location. The investigator team is usually composed of two characters who operate in their specific region—for example, Team Cologne, which consists of Chief Inspector Ballauf (played by Klaus J. Behrendt) and Chief Inspector Schenk (Dietmar Bär). Only a few teams diverge from this format, such as Team Dortmund, which consists of four investigators, or Chief Inspector Lindholm, who is the sole investigator in the Tatort from Hanover. As Michael Kimmelman of the New York Times describes,
[c]rimes happen in distinctly German locales like the little city garden plots called schrebergarten, where nature-loving Germans grow their own tomatoes and show off their odd taste for plastic gnomes. The “Tatort”-detectives in Cologne invariably stop at their favorite büdchen, the little beer and bratwurst stands typical of the Rhineland. (C1)
Tatort is not just one of many German TV crime series with Lokalkolorit, a regional flavor with local scenery, however. Instead, particularly in the twenty-first century, it has become known not only for dealing with crime and criminal justice, but also with various types of social injustice.
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- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015