Henriette Kraze’s Heim Neuland (1908) and the Idealized Nonviolent Colonial Community

IF 0.2 Q3 Social Sciences
I. Brust
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This article explores how Friederike Henriette Kraze’s relatively unknown novel Heim Neuland (1908) depicts an idealized community of German colonialists claiming Heimat in Namibia (German South-West Africa) who are dedicated to peaceful coexistence with the indigenous population. Kraze’s novel links the colonial project to the larger national aim of establishing Germany as a global industrial power. Simultaneously, Kraze presents the colonial setting as a space that offers settler women new freedoms. What distinguishes Kraze’s writing from that of her contemporaries is a focus on the importance of nonviolence for the success of German colonialism. Kraze’s writing is infused with racist rhetoric, but she also defines the use of unjustified violence and cruelty as reasons for exclusion from the colonial community. This is a vision that appears in sharp contrast to the German mercilessness that caused the Herero and Nama genocide, which occurred following the writing of Heim Neuland in January 1905 and prior to its publication in 1908.
亨丽埃特·克拉兹的《海姆·纽兰》(1908)和理想化的非暴力殖民社区
摘要:本文探讨了弗里德里克·亨丽埃特·克拉泽(Friederike Henriette Kraze)相对不知名的小说《海姆纽兰》(1908)如何描绘了一个理想化的德国殖民主义者在纳米比亚(德属西南非洲)占领海玛特的社区,他们致力于与土著居民和平共处。克拉兹的小说将殖民计划与将德国打造为全球工业大国的更大国家目标联系起来。同时,Kraze将殖民背景呈现为一个为定居者妇女提供新的自由的空间。克拉兹的作品与同时代作家的不同之处在于,她关注非暴力对德国殖民主义成功的重要性。克拉兹的作品充满了种族主义的修辞,但她也将使用不合理的暴力和残忍定义为被殖民社区排斥的理由。这一愿景与德国人的无情形成鲜明对比,后者导致了赫雷罗和纳马种族灭绝,后者发生在1905年1月海姆·纽兰(Heim Neuland)写作之后,1908年出版之前。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Feminist German Studies
Feminist German Studies WOMENS STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
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