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"Our Ears Lived Their Own Lives". The Auditory Experience in Breslau Autobiographical Literature during the Third Reich
Author(s) -
Annelies Augustyns
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
kant. socialʹno-gumanitarnye nauki
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2305-8757
DOI - 10.24923/2305-8757.2021-5.1
Subject(s) - soundscape , sound (geography) , power (physics) , history , aside , identity (music) , population , musical , art , sociology , literature , psychoanalysis , psychology , aesthetics , acoustics , physics , demography , quantum mechanics
With Adolf Hitler coming to power in January 1933, the National Socialists staged their dominance in the city center of Breslau by using various visual and auditory elements - including swastikas, singing, marching, dispersing rumors - to spread their influence and keep the people under control. How were these changes in the city soundscape used for social exclusion and territory-marking? How were they experienced by the Jewish population and how can they be related to questions of identity and (non-)belonging? Addressing these questions with the corpus of autobiographical writings – both diaries and autobiographies – from Jewish victims from the city of Breslau will be the main aim of this article. This study of literary testimonies will focus on the constant and changing sounds of propaganda in Breslau, sound technologies such as radio and loudspeakers used for propaganda, and the relation between sound, identity, and trauma.Augustyns A. "Our Ears Lived Their Own Lives". The Auditory Experience in Breslau Autobiographical Literature during the Third Reich // Avant, Vol. XI, No. 3. doi: 10.26913/avant.2020.03.32

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