This 1977 book was the first full-length of East German fiction to
appear in English. It takes as its subject the political division of
Germany into two increasingly incompatible states, and it concentrates
on East German fiction for the simple reason that West German writers
are ignorant of one of the most significant events of modern history.
After dealing with various historical, bibliographical and cultural
problems, Dr Hutchinson isolates three narrative devices of particular
value to East German writers: creating a discriminating East German
visitor to the West who reinforces the standard image of the capitalist
world; introducing figures who are representative of each German state;
and examining the two states in terms of their relationship with the
Third Reich. A conclusion surveys changes in the literary image of
Germany's division between 1945 and 1970, and compares East German works
on the subject with the few written in the West.