This book examines how German-language authors have intervened in
contemporary debates on the obligation to extend hospitality to asylum
seekers, refugees, and migrants; the terrorist threat post-9/11;
globalisation and neo-liberalism; the opportunities and anxieties of
intensified mobility across borders; and whether transnationalism
necessarily implies the end of the nation state and the dawn of a new
cosmopolitanism. The book proceeds through a series of close readings of
key texts of the last twenty years, with an emphasis on the most recent
works. Authors include Terézia Mora, Richard Wagner, Olga Grjasnowa,
Marlene Streeruwitz, Vladimir Vertlib, Navid Kermani, Felicitas Hoppe,
Daniel Kehlmann, Ilija Trojanow, Christian Kracht, and Christa Wolf,
representing the diversity of contemporary German-language writing.
Through a careful process of juxtaposition and differentiation, the
individual chapters demonstrate that writers of both minority and
nonminority backgrounds address transnationalism in ways that certainly
vary but which also often overlap in surprising ways.