Ghetto Voices in Contemporary German Culture
Ghetto Voices in Contemporary German Culture: Textscapes, Filmscapes, Soundscapes
Maria Stehle
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Volume: 125
Copyright Date: 2012
Published by: Boydell and Brewer,
Pages: 224
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7722/j.ctt1x734p
Search for reviews of this book
Book Info
Ghetto Voices in Contemporary German Culture
Book Description:

Accounts of how Germany has changed since unification often portray the Berlin Republic as a new Germany that has left the Nazi past and Cold War division behind and entered the new millennium as a peaceful, worldly, and cautiously proud nation. Closer inspection, however, reveals tensions between such views and the realities of a country that continues to struggle with racism, provincialism, and fear of the perceived Other. Mainstream media foster such fears by describing violence in ghetto schools, failed integration, and the loss of society's core values. The city emerges as a key site not only of ethnic and political tension but of social change. Maria Stehle illuminates these tensions and transformations by following the metaphor of the ghetto in literary works from the 1990s by Feridun Zaimoglu, in German ghettocentric films from the late 1990s and the early twenty-first century, and in hip-hop and rap music of the same periods. In their representations of ghettos, authors, filmmakers, musicians, and performers redefine and challenge provincialism and nationalism and employ transcultural frameworks for their diverging political agendas. By contextualizing these discussions within social and political developments, this study illuminates the complexities that define Germany today for scholars and students across the disciplines of German, European, cultural, urban, and media studies. Maria Stehle is Assistant Professor of German at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

eISBN: 978-1-57113-834-7
Subjects: Language & Literature
You do not have access to this book on JSTOR. Try logging in through your institution for access.
Log in to your personal account or through your institution.
Table of Contents
Export Selected Citations Export to NoodleTools Export to RefWorks Export to EasyBib Export a RIS file (For EndNote, ProCite, Reference Manager, Zotero, Mendeley...) Export a Text file (For BibTex)
Select / Unselect all
  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-viii)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. ix-x)
  3. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. xi-xiii)
  4. Introduction: Ghetto Discourses and German Mediascapes
    Introduction: Ghetto Discourses and German Mediascapes (pp. 1-19)

    The above quote from Feridun Zaimoglu’s 1998 publication Koppstoff, a collection of protocols written by Turkish-German women, describes how the Germans understand their Others: as the “life on the streets,” as “ghetto shooters,” as a multicultural, Bohemian fantasy. The Germans use the Kanaken, a derogatory term for Turks in Germany, for entertainment, as action figures, as a kind of drug against boredom, as adding flavor. But conveniently these images can also justify exclusion: when the Turks’ “shots” get too loud, what until then constituted their entertainment value quickly becomes the reason for their continued exclusion. The quote is a sarcastic...

  5. 1: Ghettos and Feridun Zaimoglu’s Textscapes of the 1990s
    1: Ghettos and Feridun Zaimoglu’s Textscapes of the 1990s (pp. 20-63)

    Feridun Zaimoglu’s literary texts from the 1990s were written within a political landscape in flux: in the 1990s the challenge of German unification intersected with European integration, the opening of Europe to the East triggered new waves of immigration, the unemployment rate rose, and neo-Nazi violence increased. The international media attention that the German unification process received and the subsequent racist violence in post-unification Germany fueled discussions in German media about the country’s need to redefine itself, which meant to renegotiate its relationship to its own past, to reconcile the differences between the two Germanys, and to redefine Germany within...

  6. 2: Ghetto Filmscapes and the Politics of the Ghetto Film
    2: Ghetto Filmscapes and the Politics of the Ghetto Film (pp. 65-127)

    In the film Kanak Attack (2000) the main protagonist Ertan Ongun understands life as a never-ending cycle, a story where everything recurs. He is constantly on the move but always returns to where he started. Then Ertan corrects himself: the story is not really a story; it’s a state, a permanent state of exception. The story and the aesthetics of the film Kanak Attack reflect this tension between circular movement and stagnation.

    Isa aka Chiko, the main character in Chiko (2008), presents his life philosophy as a way out of life’s hopeless repetitive cycle. But his philosophy follows a rather...

  7. 3: Ghetto Soundscapes: Performances of Nation, Gender, and Authenticity
    3: Ghetto Soundscapes: Performances of Nation, Gender, and Authenticity (pp. 129-181)

    In the song “Gheddo”³ rapper Eko Fresh asks the listener to join him on a tour through his hood so that he can demonstrate what it means to live in an environment dominated by drugs, prostitution, and social welfare. Bushido, one of the most famous and commercially successful German rappers,⁴ joins Eko Fresh in the second strophe as a tour guide. Their tour features Eko’s and Bushido’s neighborhoods in Berlin, images of concrete landscapes and graffiti art, and other urban and suburban sections of Germany. A young boy makes his way through this urban jungle. Repeatedly, the rappers address the...

  8. Conclusion
    Conclusion (pp. 182-186)

    This study has engaged with the political tensions that have emerged in representations of ghetto spaces in Germany since the mid 1990s. Literature, film, and musical productions put forth an excess of ghetto images and ghetto identities: the rebellious Kanake, the Turkish and/or German bad boy, the gangster ghetto dealer, and the ghetto bitch inhabit both the globalized hood and Germany’s provincial foreigner ghetto. By analyzing the tropes that characterize ghetto narratives and ghetto imagery, I put a magnifying glass over mental maps to highlight the tensions and contingencies in attempts to define urban space in unified Germany. Popular news...

  9. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. 187-200)
  10. Index
    Index (pp. 201-206)
  11. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 207-207)