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compulsion
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Journal Article
New German Critique (2024) 51 (2 (152)): 105–133.
Published: 01 August 2024
...Gerard Passannante This essay locates in Max Weber’s body of work a theory of recognition in compulsion. With particular attention to Weber’s engagement with pre- and early modern sources, the essay argues that this theory illuminates his project of historical interpretation. For Weber, compulsion...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2011) 38 (1 (112)): 9–38.
Published: 01 February 2011
... , and Leaden Times are implicated in a “narrative fetish,” an attempt to reconfigure traumatic history to circumvent an authentic work of mourning. Two “tics” recur throughout these RAF films: first, a compulsive return to Holocaust images, such as those screened in Alain Resnais's Night and Fog ; second...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2013) 40 (1 (118)): 175–198.
Published: 01 February 2013
... (and that response, of course, formed
a solution in which certain elements were repressed from consciousness). The
compulsion to repeat in treatment that Freud refers to here is what he calls
“transference,” in which behaviors formed in the past are transferred onto the
situation of treatment. Hence fears...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2007) 34 (2 (101)): 1–26.
Published: 01 August 2007
... and body language: “When I look back today, it was practically an inner
compulsion [Zwang]—by that I don’t mean to talk pretty—an inner compulsion
that [long pause] our whole circle or let’s say our whole atmosphere [extremely
long pause] I volunteered for war to serve the state, like any other...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2009) 36 (1 (106)): 61–81.
Published: 01 February 2009
...). To be sure, he who says “A”
can by all means decide to say “B,” and this, as long as it does not succumb
to an outer compulsion, may very well signal one’s freedom to act. The point
is: whatever may guarantee meaning, consistency does not guarantee it. Not
raising a claim to consistency, though...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2021) 48 (3 (144)): 99–139.
Published: 01 November 2021
... that at first seem arranged something like pruned hedgerows of the Paris park to which its title refers, but later coalesce into longer stretches of narrative, compulsively returning to the same disquieting memories. Central among these episodes, and the one that occupies Sebald’s narrator over several pages...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 35–45.
Published: 01 August 2014
... of such melancholia into a recognition of loss and an acceptance
of it. But Freud is very aware how difficult this process may be, a maze of
detours and dead ends, a labyrinth in which even a detective may be led into
endless blind repetition or fixation. This is the definition of melancholia. The
compulsion...
Journal Article
Between Israel and Germany: Therapeutic Return to the Place of Trauma in Contemporary Israeli Cinema
New German Critique (2014) 41 (3 (123)): 179–197.
Published: 01 November 2014
... it. A society might shift
from the former extreme to the latter thanks to collective mourning rituals,
which enable it to put an end to the compulsive repetition that characterizes
its acting out, since through them the society critically observes its traumatic
past and is able to separate it from its...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2017) 44 (1 (130)): 205–216.
Published: 01 February 2017
... a basis for
customized advertisement, and it undermines resistance to this social constel-
4. Eggers, Circle, 305.
5. Deresiewicz speaks on behalf of many when he defines the compulsion to share as a “kind of
exhibitionism” and as “faintly obsceneFaux Friendship
6. The protagonists...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2017) 44 (2 (131)): 75–103.
Published: 01 August 2017
...
with Horkheimer on this formula in Dialectic of Enlightenment: “Monopoly,
as the consummation of private property, destroys the latter’s very concept.
From the pact of subjection and social contract—which in power relations fas-
cism replaces with secret agreements—fascism leaves only the compulsion...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2021) 48 (2 (143)): 147–175.
Published: 01 August 2021
... that the experience of a sound film “positively debars the spectator from thinking.” 2 By blocking the development of our cognitive capacities, film acts as an ideological mechanism and furthers the “compulsive character of a society alienated from itself” ( DE , 95). From these passages, we get the sense...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2012) 39 (3 (117)): 189–205.
Published: 01 November 2012
... akin to the repetition compulsion of the traumatized subject. He
acquires and accumulates objects perhaps out of a fascination that does not
provide insight or understanding either into his own compulsion or into the
histories of the objects secured. The collector, in other words, might all too...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2008) 35 (2 (104)): 33–53.
Published: 01 August 2008
... the gap between experience and reflection that critique requires. The
enabling illusion of administered society—that compulsive, systemic rational-
ization has the same kind of reason or purpose as Erfahrung proper, even as it
preempts the latter—is what Adorno means by calling it a “myth...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2020) 47 (2 (140)): 169–189.
Published: 01 August 2020
... of nature’s longing to reconcile itself , wherein reconciliation might best be paraphrased as a state in which the compulsion to conform to universal tendencies is broken and the nonidentical might finally positively exist in the world. Natural beauty does not redeem this promise, however—it merely hints...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2019) 46 (3 (138)): 79–101.
Published: 01 November 2019
... it? Maybe that I have never listened to music as compulsively as I do now that I am making this film? Then I think: One should make music. Music touches people. Sorry for the truism, but music isn’t something one really makes. Rather, it is something that happens to someone.] 5 Figure 1...
FIGURES
Journal Article
New German Critique (2013) 40 (2 (119)): 113–136.
Published: 01 August 2013
... is a
privileged medium for precisely such a blurring of boundaries. Mahler as
“prophet of the antimodern” may come most clearly into view through an anal-
ysis of his use in film. A further element hitherto unnoticed in this interpreta-
tion is Mahler as sound track to the compulsive, the obsessive...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2019) 46 (2 (137)): 197–220.
Published: 01 August 2019
... dictates of history through “the compulsion imposed by the regime of terror from without, and the compulsion of an ideological way of thinking imposed from within.” 59 It seems clear, then, that the shift from “radical evil” to “the banality of evil,” as well as Arendt’s realization that she had...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2019) 46 (2 (137)): 171–195.
Published: 01 August 2019
... to overcome. Thus, proverbially, those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. In Freudian psychoanalysis, repetition compulsion is necessarily unconscious; the patient does not realize that he or she is repeating the past, and it is the goal of Freud’s hermeneutics of suspicion to uncover...
FIGURES
Journal Article
New German Critique (2006) 33 (1 (97)): 5–14.
Published: 01 February 2006
... to the experiential content inherent in the “émigr
a category that connotes an ongoing awareness of violence, an awareness that
inhibits the ability to identify wholly with the land of refuge. The inner com-
pulsion to integrate into a new society—a compulsion that mirrors the rules
of bourgeois society more...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2023) 50 (3 (150)): 25–35.
Published: 01 November 2023
... has shown how the concept of assimilation in postwar Germany has been driven by a compulsion to repeat. Forever marked as immigrants ( Zuwanderer ) or persons with a migration background ( Menschen mit Migrationshintergrund ), migrants and their children are caught in an endless cycle of racialization...
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