A History of Violence
Photography and Writing as an Experience, Experiment and Insight
9783035806458
Distributed for DIAPHANES
A History of Violence
Photography and Writing as an Experience, Experiment and Insight
An artistic study of the Wendezeit in East Germany.
The focus of this narrative-analytical text-photo-montage is the so-called Wendezeit in East Germany, the years after the reunification, and the individual and collective outbreaks of violence that accompanied this radical change. Based on personal experiences and trained on literary and theoretical works such as Alexander Kluge’s Case Histories, Klaus Theweleit’s Male Fantasies, and W.G. Sebald’s novel Austerlitz, Kai Ziegner reflects on remembrance and testimony in a way that is as critical as it is experimental.
Where and how do authoritarian regimes and structures persist across generations? What scars can be read on the fault lines of disruptive processes and how to deal with—not only historical—situations in which the protagonists are victims and perpetrators at the same time? Ziegner’s artistic research shows how the unpresentable can become visible, how the ambiguous can be told, and how a differentiated processing can be made possible.
The focus of this narrative-analytical text-photo-montage is the so-called Wendezeit in East Germany, the years after the reunification, and the individual and collective outbreaks of violence that accompanied this radical change. Based on personal experiences and trained on literary and theoretical works such as Alexander Kluge’s Case Histories, Klaus Theweleit’s Male Fantasies, and W.G. Sebald’s novel Austerlitz, Kai Ziegner reflects on remembrance and testimony in a way that is as critical as it is experimental.
Where and how do authoritarian regimes and structures persist across generations? What scars can be read on the fault lines of disruptive processes and how to deal with—not only historical—situations in which the protagonists are victims and perpetrators at the same time? Ziegner’s artistic research shows how the unpresentable can become visible, how the ambiguous can be told, and how a differentiated processing can be made possible.
110 pages | 20 color plates, 33 halftones | 7.01 x 11.26 | © 2024
Art: Photography
Literature and Literary Criticism: Germanic Languages

Be the first to know
Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!