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
12 - Intimacies both Sacred and Profane: Islam in the Work of Emine Sevgi Özdamar, Zafer Şnocak, and Feridun Zaimoğlu
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
There is a new wall rising in Berlin. Looking over that wall, one sees the parallel world of the Islamic suburbs. It's a world in which women, unlike some Muslim women in Europe who have risen to expansive lives, are still subject to arranged marriages and the control of their families.
THESE ARE THE WORDS of novelist Peter Schneider, published in the New York Times on 4 December 2005, in an article that warns of the recent rise of radical Islam in Germany. The author of Der Mauerspringer (1982), whose protagonist fantasized away the Cold War division of Berlin, now fears the development of another parallel world, of unassimilable, alien Muslim communities. And he is not alone in this anxiety. Despite significant changes to German citizenship legislation since 2000, which now acknowledges territorial as well as ancestral affiliation as the basis for German identity, the countermanding force of increased national security and decreasing tolerance of dual citizenship since September 2001 are signals of the troubled state of German multiculturalism today. Such antagonistic scenarios and fears of the emergence of a “Parallelgesellschaft” render all the more important the imaginative labor of Turkish-German authors in envisaging new kinds of German community, and in overcoming simplistic and homogenizing ideas of Islam in Europe.
Contemporary perceptions of Islam like Schneider's continue to rely on a tradition of dichotomous thinking in terms of global versus local, traditional versus modern, where Islam belongs immutably on the side of authentic local cultures and is pitted against global modernity.
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- Encounters with Islam in German Literature and Culture , pp. 221 - 235Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009