Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/6758
Title: Von ‚frechen Frauen‘ und ‚literarischen Fräuleinwundern‘ – Das pejorative Labeling zeitgenössischer Literatur von Frauen
Authors: Folie, Sandra
Keywords: Chick lit;Freche Frauen;Literarisches Fräuleinwunder;New women’s fiction;Contemporary literature;German literature;Literary labeling;Postfeminism
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Roma : Carocci
Citation: Folie, Sansdra. "Von ‚frechen Frauen‘ und ‚literarischen Fräuleinwundern‘ – Das pejorative Labeling zeitgenössischer Literatur von Frauen". «Testi e linguaggi» 16 (2022): 117-144. [Studi monografici. Dalla neue frau/new woman/donna nuova al transgender e queer: trasformazioni dei discorsi sull’identità di genere]
Abstract: Every wave of the women’s movement seems to be accompanied by at least one wave of feminist ‘new women’s fiction’. Thus, the late 20th century daughters of the second-wavers were often associated with freche Frauen literature (cheeky women literature). Somewhat analogous to chick lit in the Anglo-American world, this genre supposedly became what third-wavers at the time wanted to write and read. At least that was what major publishers and bookstores suggested with their freche Frauen book series, bookshelves, and genre categorizations. In 1999, when the freche Frauen were just becoming more widely known, the literary critic Volker Hage coined the literarische Fräuleinwunder (literaryyoung miracle women), another gendered literary label. Among these Fräuleinwunders, he grouped authors such as Karen Duve, Judith Hermann, and Zoë Jenny, whom he considered more elaborate successors to the commercial women’s fiction of the time. In this article, I approach the two German literary labels freche Frauen and literarisches Fräuleinwunder terminologically and discursively. In a comparative analysis of secondary literature, reviews, and (archived) websites of publishers and booksellers, I highlight the pejorative connotations of both labels alongside their ostensibly empowering implications. My aim is to illustrate that the once emancipatory potential of so-called ‘new women’s fiction’ has all but faded in the gendered literary labeling of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. In fact, the formerly feminist attempts to appropriate and renew the problematic label ‘women’s fiction’ have transformed into either a harmless neoliberal feminism or a paternalistic pseudo-elevation through which publishers, booksellers, or literary critics infantilize, sexualize, and devalue women and their literature.
URI: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/6758
http://dx.doi.org/10.14273/unisa-4819
ISBN: 978-88-290-1439-2
ISSN: 1974-2886
Appears in Collections:Testi e linguaggi. Volume 16 (2022)

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