Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 “cristen, ketzer, heiden, jüden”: Questions of Identity in the Middle Ages
- 2 Wolfram von Eschenbach, Islam, and the Crusades
- 3 Perverted Spaces: Boundary Negotiations in Early-Modern Turcica
- 4 Enlightenment Encounters the Islamic and Arabic Worlds: The German “Missing Link” in Said's Orientalist Narrative (Meiners and Herder)
- 5 Goethe, Islam, and the Orient: The Impetus for and Mode of Cultural Encounter in the West-östlicher Divan
- 6 Moving beyond the Binary? Christian-Islamic Encounters and Gender in the Thought and Literature of German Romanticism
- 7 Forms of Encounter with Islam around 1800: The Cases of Johann Hermann von Riedesel and Johann Ludwig Burckhardt
- 8 Displacing Orientalism: Ottoman Jihad, German Imperialism, and the Armenian Genocide
- 9 German-Islamic Literary Interperceptions in Works by Emily Ruete and Emine Sevgi Özdamar
- 10 Dialogues with Islam in the Writings of (Turkish-)German Intellectuals: A Historical Turn?
- 11 Michaela Mihriban Özelsel's Pilgrimage to Mecca: A Journey to Her Inner Self
- 12 Intimacies both Sacred and Profane: Islam in the Work of Emine Sevgi Özdamar, Zafer Şnocak, and Feridun Zaimoğlu
- 13 Encountering Islam at Its Roots: Ilija Trojanow's Zu den heiligen Quellen des Islam
- 14 The Lure of the Loser: On Hans Magnus Enzensberger's Schreckens Männer and Ian Buruma's Murder in Amsterdam
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
9 - German-Islamic Literary Interperceptions in Works by Emily Ruete and Emine Sevgi Özdamar
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 “cristen, ketzer, heiden, jüden”: Questions of Identity in the Middle Ages
- 2 Wolfram von Eschenbach, Islam, and the Crusades
- 3 Perverted Spaces: Boundary Negotiations in Early-Modern Turcica
- 4 Enlightenment Encounters the Islamic and Arabic Worlds: The German “Missing Link” in Said's Orientalist Narrative (Meiners and Herder)
- 5 Goethe, Islam, and the Orient: The Impetus for and Mode of Cultural Encounter in the West-östlicher Divan
- 6 Moving beyond the Binary? Christian-Islamic Encounters and Gender in the Thought and Literature of German Romanticism
- 7 Forms of Encounter with Islam around 1800: The Cases of Johann Hermann von Riedesel and Johann Ludwig Burckhardt
- 8 Displacing Orientalism: Ottoman Jihad, German Imperialism, and the Armenian Genocide
- 9 German-Islamic Literary Interperceptions in Works by Emily Ruete and Emine Sevgi Özdamar
- 10 Dialogues with Islam in the Writings of (Turkish-)German Intellectuals: A Historical Turn?
- 11 Michaela Mihriban Özelsel's Pilgrimage to Mecca: A Journey to Her Inner Self
- 12 Intimacies both Sacred and Profane: Islam in the Work of Emine Sevgi Özdamar, Zafer Şnocak, and Feridun Zaimoğlu
- 13 Encountering Islam at Its Roots: Ilija Trojanow's Zu den heiligen Quellen des Islam
- 14 The Lure of the Loser: On Hans Magnus Enzensberger's Schreckens Männer and Ian Buruma's Murder in Amsterdam
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
IN THIS CHAPTER I WILL CONSIDER the encounter with Islam through the medium of language in literary texts by the contemporary Turkish-German writer Emine Sevgi Özdamar and the late nineteenth-century Arab-German writer Emily Ruete. The contexts in which the two women write are of course vastly different. Özdamar's short story “Großvater Zunge” and her novel Das Leben ist eine Karawanserei hat zwei Türen aus einer kam ich rein aus der anderen ging ich raus—her texts that engage most directly with Islam—were published in 1990 and 1992 respectively, at which time Turks and other ethnic minorities were already a substantial presence in Germany. In contrast Emily Ruete's Memoiren einer arabischen Prinzessin (now titled Leben im Sultanspalast) was published in 1886, while her text Briefe nach der Heimat, probably written in the 1880s, came to light after her death in 1924 but was first published in German only in 1999: she belongs far more to the European era of colonization, Orientalism, and the scramble for Africa. And yet Özdamar and Ruete share much in the critical “Islamic” encounters with German and Germany that they produce. This is demonstrated not least by the fact that there was support for publication of Ruete's Briefe in 1999 and that her Sultanspalast has recently been republished. As Fedwa Malti-Douglas observes, “her textual journey is more than simply a set of memoiristic … flourishes that keep the reader's feet firmly planted in the nineteenth century.”
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- Encounters with Islam in German Literature and Culture , pp. 166 - 180Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009