Why Has A Fascination With Fascism Re-emerged After The Cold War? What Is Its Cultural Function Now, In An Era Of Commemoration? Focusing Particularly On The British Context, This Study Offers The First Analysis Of Contemporary Popular And Literary Fiction, Film, Tv And Art Exhibitions About Nazis And Nazism. Petra Rau Brings This Material Into Dialogue With Earlier Responses To Fascism And Demonstrates How, Paradoxically, Nazism Has Been Both Mediated And Mythologised To The Extent That It Now Often Replaces A Critical Engagement With Actual, Violent History. In 5 Thematic Chapters On Nazi Noir, Men In Uniform, Vile Bodies, The Good German And Meta-cinematic Farce, Rau Provides Close Analysis Of Contemporary Novels Such As Jason Lutes' Graphic Novel Series Berlin, Historical Crime Fiction By Philip Kerr And Others, Robert Harris' Fatherland, Ian Mcewan's Black Dogs And Justin Cartwright's The Song Before It Is Sung; Films Such As Bryan Singer's Valkyrie And Quentin Tarantino's Inglorious Bastards; Art Installations Including Mirroring Evil: Nazi Imagery/recent Art, And Fucking Hell By Jake And Dinos Chapman; And Piotr Uklanski's Photo Frieze, Untitled (the Nazis).--publisher's Website. Introduction: 'having Your Nazi Cake And Eating It' -- Nazi Noir: Hardboiled Masculinity And Fascist Sensibility From Ambler And Greene To Philip Kerr -- The Fascist Corpus In The Age Of Holocaust Remembrance: Harris' Fatherland And Mcewan's Black Dogs -- 'fascism' As Excess And Abjection: Jonathan Littell's The Kindly Ones -- The Good German: The Stauffenberg Plot And Its Discontents -- 'operation Kino': Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds As Meta-cinematic Farce -- Coda. Petra Rau. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.
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