%0 Journal Article %A Smith-Prei, Carrie %T A figure of ambivalent retreat: The case of Gisela Elsner %D 2014 %J Public, %V 25 %N 50 %P 19-26 %@ 2048-6928 %R https://doi.org/10.1386/public.25.50.19_1 %K satire %K anti-fascism %K West Germany %K negativity %K middle class %K refusal %K Herbert Marcuse %K Gisela Elsner %I Intellect, %X Abstract Retreat communicates power through refusal. By turning away or separating from, the subject in retreat engages in an act of negativity that demands a break with dominant modes of thinking and a redirecting of energies towards the messy, diffuse, or unpopular. In the post-1945 German context, such associations carry specific historical and cultural weight, as negation always also denotes a retreat from the legacies of fascism. This article examines the German author Gisela Elsner (1937-1992) as a case study of just such a retreat. As a figure, she enacted retreat through costuming, make-up, and her fierce commitment to the DKP, the German Communist Party, despite her location in West Germany. Her writing also retreats - from representation, from pleasure, from emotion and from interpretation. The article explores Elsner as a figure of retreat that complicates the positive coding of the term's identity-political possibilities. %U https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/10.1386/public.25.50.19_1