Re-capturing the self: narratives of self and captivity by women political prisoners in Germany 1915-1991
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Date
25/11/2010Author
Richmond, Kim Treharne
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Abstract
This project represents one of the few major pieces of research into women’s narratives
of political incarceration and is an examination of first person accounts written against a
backdrop of significant historical events in twentieth-century Germany. I explore the
ways in which the writers use their published accounts as an attempt to come to terms
with their incarceration (either during or after their imprisonment). Such an undertaking
involves examining how the writer ‘performs’ femininity within the de-feminising
context of prison, as well as how she negotiates her self-representation as a ‘good’
woman. The role of language as a means of empowerment within the disempowering
environment of incarceration is central to this investigation. Rosa Luxemburg’s prison
letters are the starting point for the project. Luxemburg was a key female political figure
in twentieth-century Germany and her letters encapsulate prevalent notions about
womanhood, prison, and political engagement that are perceptible in the subsequent texts
of the thesis. Luise Rinser’s and Lore Wolf’s diaries from National Socialist prisons
show, in their different ways, how the writer uses language to ‘survive’ prison and to
constitute herself as a subject and woman in response to the loss of self experienced in
incarceration. Margret Bechler’s and Elisabeth Graul’s retrospective accounts of GDR
incarceration give insight into the elastic concept of both the political prisoner and the
‘good’ woman. They demonstrate their authors’ endeavours to achieve a sense of
autonomy and reclaim the experience of prison using narrative. All of the narratives are
examples of the role of language in resisting an imposed identity as ‘prisoner’, ‘criminal’
and object of the prison system.