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Serial Narration in Popular German-Language Periodicals from 1850 to 1890

Subject Area German Literary and Cultural Studies (Modern German Literature)
Term Funded in 2013
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 68338857
 
Recent literary scholarship has analyzed popular periodicals with a particular focus on social theory and systems theory. What has largely been neglected, however, are questions of how German periodicals and magazines created seriality in the latter half of the nineteenth century and which modes of depiction and strategies for sustaining readerships were used for serialized effects. This project on the early history of popular seriality seeks to close this research gap through systematic analyses of exemplary nineteenth-century newspapers as well as literary and cultural magazines. It aims to do so by pursuing two concerted objectives: First, it will investigate serialized forms of feuilleton novels published in the Kölnische Zeitung in terms of interdependencies between non-fictional and fictional texts. In doing so, it will also consider the political, cultural, and media-historical implications of serialized narration. Second, and closely connected with the first objective, the project will study serial forms of narration in representative magazine formats (Die Gartenlaube, Deutsche Rundschau, Deutsche Romanbibliothek zu Ueber Land und Meer). The magazines' overall composition (design, layout, organization of content, illustrations, advertisements) figures strongly in this context and will accordingly be analyzed as a serial program with regard to periodical distribution and reception. We hypothesize that the successful models of serialized narration that evolved during the twentieth century have their origins in the periodicals of the nineteenth century. Thus, the project extends central objectives of the Research Unit's first funding period by addressing the historical emergence of serial techniques of narrative distinction. Specifically, it builds upon the insights provided by subproject 2 (seriality in the ARD police procedural Tatort) and subproject 5 (on the dynamics of serial outbidding). In addition, we ask how the evolving practice of collecting popular nineteenth-century periodicals, as seen in private archives and public libraries, influenced early forms and techniques of seriality. In addressing such issues concerning the variable reception experiences of serialized publications, this project continues research conducted in subproject 6 ("Collecting: Pulp Novels between Popular Culture and Canon"). Moreover, the project provides a historical perspective on the interaction between fans and producers of serial creation in the twentyfirst century (as explored in subproject 7 on the quotidian integration and social positioning of pulp novels and television series). In the evolution of serial production, both the fans of contemporary serial narratives and the readers of serialized magazines in the nineteenth century figure as influential agents. Methodologically, the project combines a systematic compilation and analysis of a large textual corpus with a textual approach vested in a cultural and media-historical perspective on the forms and techniques of serial distinction created by periodicals.
DFG Programme Research Units
 
 

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