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Gender, Genre, and the Evolution of Memory
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Shows how genre links gender and memory in German "mother books" and contends that recent changes in German memory culture reflect a gendered shift as much as a generational one.To an extraordinary...
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02 June 2026

Shows how genre links gender and memory in German "mother books" and contends that recent changes in German memory culture reflect a gendered shift as much as a generational one.
To an extraordinary degree, German literary memoirs and novels published since the Second World War have struggled with remembering the war and its aftermath. In approaching questions of individual, family, and collective memory in literature and German memory culture more broadly, scholars have emphasized the concept of generation. The present study complicates this generational view by examining eight decades of German-language memoirs and novels about World War II-era mothers and grandmothers. As it traces the evolution of these books, it demonstrates their surprising similarity over time and illuminates how genre mediates between gender and memory.
In the German context, the book finds that many features associated with contemporary literary memory are common in "mother books" from the 1950s onward, as well as in genres traditionally coded as female. It thus contends that the change in German memory culture around 2000 can be viewed as a gendered shift as much as a generational one: in the last twenty years, what was once marginalized as women's memory has become central to German memory culture. More generally, the study demonstrates how gendered genres both perpetuate existing complexes of gender and memory and signal-and even contribute to-new constellations of gendered memory. Reading books by authors from Heinrich Böll to Eugen Ruge and Jenny Erpenbeck, it reveals genre as a key mechanism linking gender and memory.
To an extraordinary degree, German literary memoirs and novels published since the Second World War have struggled with remembering the war and its aftermath. In approaching questions of individual, family, and collective memory in literature and German memory culture more broadly, scholars have emphasized the concept of generation. The present study complicates this generational view by examining eight decades of German-language memoirs and novels about World War II-era mothers and grandmothers. As it traces the evolution of these books, it demonstrates their surprising similarity over time and illuminates how genre mediates between gender and memory.
In the German context, the book finds that many features associated with contemporary literary memory are common in "mother books" from the 1950s onward, as well as in genres traditionally coded as female. It thus contends that the change in German memory culture around 2000 can be viewed as a gendered shift as much as a generational one: in the last twenty years, what was once marginalized as women's memory has become central to German memory culture. More generally, the study demonstrates how gendered genres both perpetuate existing complexes of gender and memory and signal-and even contribute to-new constellations of gendered memory. Reading books by authors from Heinrich Böll to Eugen Ruge and Jenny Erpenbeck, it reveals genre as a key mechanism linking gender and memory.
Price: $120.00
Pages: 252
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Camden House
Series: Women and Gender in German Studies
Publication Date:
02 June 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781640142442
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / German, Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers, LITERARY CRITICISM / Women Authors, LITERARY CRITICISM / Feminist, Gender studies, gender groups, Gender studies: women and girls
Introduction
Chapter 1: A Different Point of View: From Wartime Journals to the Retrospective Family Narrative
Chapter 2: No Woman is an Island: Life Writing and the Roots of Contemporary Retrospective Family Narratives
Chapter 3: Genre Trouble: Sons Writing Mothers' Lives
Chapter 4: A Shock to the System: Merging Retrospective Family Narratives and the Trauma Plot
Chapter 5: A House Divided: Competing Family Novels in Retrospective Family Narratives
Conclusion
Appendix: Corpus of Mother-Focused Family Narratives
Primary Sources: The Corpus of Mother-Focused Family Narratives
Chapter 1: A Different Point of View: From Wartime Journals to the Retrospective Family Narrative
Chapter 2: No Woman is an Island: Life Writing and the Roots of Contemporary Retrospective Family Narratives
Chapter 3: Genre Trouble: Sons Writing Mothers' Lives
Chapter 4: A Shock to the System: Merging Retrospective Family Narratives and the Trauma Plot
Chapter 5: A House Divided: Competing Family Novels in Retrospective Family Narratives
Conclusion
Appendix: Corpus of Mother-Focused Family Narratives
Primary Sources: The Corpus of Mother-Focused Family Narratives