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Max Weber famously described politics as "a strong, slow drilling
through hard boards with both passion and judgment." Taking this as
his inspiration, Alexander Kluge brings readers yet another
literary masterpiece. Drilling through Hard Boards is a
kaleidoscopic meditation on the tools available to those who
struggle for power. Weber's metaphorical drill certainly embodies
intelligent tenacity as a precondition for political change. But
what is a hammer in the business of politics, Kluge wonders, and
what is a subtle touch? Eventually, we learn that all questions of
politics lead to a single one: what is political in the first
place? In the book, Kluge masterfully unspools more than one
hundred vignettes, through which it becomes clear that the
political is more often than not personal. Politics are everywhere
in our everyday lives, so along with the stories of major political
figures, we also find here the small, mostly unknown ones: Elfriede
Eilers alongside Pericles, Chilean miners next to Napoleon, a
three-month-old baby beside Alexander the Great. Drilling through
Hard Boards is not just Kluge's newest fiction, it is a masterpiece
of political thought.
Alexander Kluge's work has long grappled with the Third Reich and
its aftermath, and the extermination of the Jews forms its
gravitational center. Kluge is forever reminding us to keep our
present catastrophes in perspective-"calibrated"-against this
historical monstrosity. Kluge's newest work is a book about bitter
fates, both already known and yet to unfold. Above all, it is about
the many kinds of organized machinery built to destroy people.
These forty-eight stories of justice and injustice are dedicated to
the memory of Fritz Bauer, determined fighter for justice and
district attorney of Hesse during the Auschwitz Trials. "The moment
they come into existence, monstrous crimes have a unique ability,"
Bauer once said, "to ensure their own repetition." Kluge takes
heed, and in these pages reminds us of the importance of keeping
our powers of observation and memory razor sharp.
In a world full of devils, the giant ape Kong defends what he loves
the most. But who and what is this undomesticated animal? Might it
reside within us? As we tread confidently, is this where the earth
opens up beneath us? In Kong's Finest Hour, Alexander Kluge
explores anew the accessible spaces where Kong dwells within us and
in our million-year-old past. The more than two hundred stories
contained in this volume form a chronicle of connections that
together survey these spaces using diverse perspectives. These
include stories about the folds of Kong's nose, the voice of the
author's mother, the poet Heinrich von Kleist and Jack the Ripper,
the indestructability of the political, and the supercontinent
Pangaea that once unified the earth. Dissolving theory into
storytelling has been Kluge's lifelong pursuit, and this
magnificent collection tells stories of people as well of things.
First in a series of Kluge's Chronicles forthcoming from Seagull
Books, Kong's Finest Hour will delight those familiar with his
writing as well as introduce readers to the brilliance of one of
Germany's greatest living writers.
An intellectually stimulating yet accessible collection of short
vignettes on Russia and Germany by Alexander Kluge. Not just in
light of a contested pipeline during the war in Ukraine but also
after centuries of both exchange and rejection, Russia and Germany
were and are as far away from each other as they are intrinsically
linked. The geopolitical present seems critical, the signs pointing
towards conflict and polarity. In this hot climate, German author
Alexander Kluge makes Russia the exclusive subject of his latest
book, offering multiple perspectives: from that of the historical
German patriots of the Napoleonic Wars of Liberation to the
narrative point of view of Franz Kafka and Heiner Muller; from
messianic yearning and utopian expectations of the twentieth
century to the full-blown or near-miss catastrophes in the atomic
age. Composed in Kluge's characteristic short-prose vignette style,
interspersed with numerous images and often humorous asides, Russia
Container is yet another brilliant and thought-provoking work from
one of Europe's most prolific and deeply intellectual literary
genius. The volume includes a preface specially written to engage
with the current events in Ukraine, making Kluge's narratives even
more timely and topical.
April 30, 1945, marked an end of sorts in the Third Reich. The last
business day before a national holiday and then a series of
transfers of power, April 30 was a day filled with contradictions
and bewildering events that would forever define global history. It
was on this day that while the Red Army occupied Berlin, Hitler
committed suicide in his underground bunker, and, in San Francisco,
the United Nations was being founded. Alexander Kluge's latest
book, 30 April 1945, covers this single historic day and unravels
its passing hours across the different theaters of the Second World
War. Translated by Wieland Hoban, the book delves into the events
happening around the world on one fateful day, including the life
of a small German town occupied by American forces and the story of
two SS officers stranded on the forsaken Kerguelen Islands in the
South Indian Sea. Kluge is a master storyteller, and as he unfolds
these disparate tales, one unavoidable question surfaces: What is
the appropriate reaction to the total upheaval of the status quo?
Enriched by an afterword by Reinhard Jirgl, translated by Iain
Galbraith, 30 April 1945 is a riveting collection of lives turned
upside down by the deadliest war in history. The collective
experiences Kluge paints here are jarring, poignant, and imbued
with meaning. Seventy years later, we can still see our own
reflections in the upheaval of a single day in 1945. Praise for
Klug "More than a few of Kluge's many books are essential,
brilliant achievements. None are without great interest."-Susan
Sontag
A highly readable and lighthearted, yet intellectual-stimulating
exploration of the modern human condition. Â This volume
concerns itself with the question of time, from the description of
a brief fragment passing by in a matter of minutes to stories of
the unexpected stock-market crash of 1929, a once-in-a-century
event that Europeans call â€Black Friday’ because Wall
Street’s collapse reached the Old World one day later. Through
this exploration of time, Kluge ponders some fundamental questions
not altered by the passing of time: What can I trust? How can I
protect myself? What should I be afraid of? Our age today has
achieved a new kind of obscurity. We’ve encountered a pandemic.
We’ve witnessed the Capitol riots. We see before us inflation,
war, and a burning planet. We gaze at the world with suspense. What
we need in our lives is orientation—just like ships that navigate
the high seas. We might just find that in Kluge’s vignettes and
stories. Â
Collects 166 of Alexander Kluge’s love stories previously
concealed among his vast library of more than 2,000 texts. The
latest offering from one of the greatest living German writers, The
Labyrinth of Tender Force masterfully explores the greatest peaks
and the most dreadful crevasses of passionate love through an
inspired combination of Kluge’s vignettes with drawings,
photographs, and other archival material culled from diverse
sources. Organized thematically, these stories take readers
on a flight over the maps—the varied topography—of love. This
flight ends on a high plateau, at the heart of the most beautiful
romances and a cardinal text of modernity about the economy of
relationships: Madame de La Fayette’s The Princess of Cleves.
Â
On October 5, 2012, the German national newspaper Die Welt
published its daily issue--but things looked . . . different.
Quieter. The sensations of the day, forgotten as soon as they're
read, were missing, replaced with an unprecedented calm, extracted
with care from the chaos of the contemporary. That calm was the
work of Gerhard Richter, who had been granted control over Die Welt
for that single day, taking over and imprinting all thirty pages of
the newspaper with his personal stamp: images from quiet moments
amid unquiet times, the demotion of politics from its primary
position, the privileging of the private and personal over the
public, and, above all, artful, moving contrasts between sharpness
and softness. He had created an unprecedented work of mass art.
Among the many people to praise the work was writer Alexander
Kluge, who instantly began writing stories to accompany Richter's
images. This book, the second collaboration between Kluge and
Richter, brings their stories and images together, along with new
words and artworks created specifically for this volume. The
result, Dispatches from Moments of Calm, is a beautiful, meditative
interval in the otherwise unremitting press of everyday life, a
masterpiece by two acclaimed artists working at the height of their
powers.
A reissue of Alexander Kluge's kaleidoscopic view of a
historically important day and its effects on many people’s
lives. April 30, 1945, marked an end of sorts in the Third Reich.
The last business day before a national holiday and then a series
of transfers of power, April 30 was a day filled with
contradictions and bewildering events that would forever define
global history. It was on this day that while the Red Army occupied
Berlin, Hitler committed suicide in his underground bunker, and, in
San Francisco, the United Nations was being founded. Alexander
Kluge’s latest book, 30 April 1945, covers this single historic
day and unravels its passing hours across the different theaters of
the Second World War. Translated by Wieland Hoban, the book delves
into the events happening around the world on one fateful day,
including the life of a small German town occupied by American
forces and the story of two SS officers stranded on the forsaken
Kerguelen Islands in the South Indian Sea. Kluge is a master
storyteller, and as he unfolds these disparate tales, one
unavoidable question surfaces: What is the appropriate reaction to
the total upheaval of the status quo? Presented here with an
afterword by Reinhard Jirgl, translated by Iain Galbraith, 30 April
1945 is a riveting collection of lives turned upside down by the
deadliest war in history. The collective experiences Kluge paints
here are jarring, poignant, and imbued with meaning. Seventy years
later, we can still see our own reflections on the upheaval of a
single day in 1945.
A book about bitter fates—both already known and yet to
unfold—and the many kinds of organized machinery built to destroy
people. Alexander Kluge’s work has long grappled with the Third
Reich and its aftermath, and the extermination of the Jews forms
its gravitational center. Kluge is forever reminding us to keep our
present catastrophes in perspective—“calibrated”—against
this historical monstrosity. Kluge’s newest work is a book about
bitter fates, both already known and yet to unfold. Above all, it
is about the many kinds of organized machinery built to destroy
people. These forty-eight stories of justice and injustice are
dedicated to the memory of Fritz Bauer, a determined fighter for
justice and district attorney of Hesse during the Auschwitz Trials.
“The moment they come into existence, monstrous crimes have a
unique ability,” Bauer once said, “to ensure their own
repetition.” Kluge takes heed, and in these pages reminds us of
the importance of keeping our powers of observation and memory
razor sharp. Â
Max Weber famously described politics as “a strong, slow drilling
through hard boards with both passion and judgment.” Taking this
as his inspiration, Alexander Kluge brings readers yet another
literary masterpiece. Drilling through Hard Boards is a
kaleidoscopic meditation on the tools available to those who
struggle for power. Weber’s metaphorical drill certainly embodies
intelligent tenacity as a precondition for political change. But
what is a hammer in the business of politics, Kluge wonders, and
what is a subtle touch? Eventually, we learn that all questions of
politics lead to a single one: what is political in the first
place? In the book, Kluge masterfully unspools more than one
hundred vignettes, through which it becomes clear that the
political is more often than not personal. Politics are everywhere
in our everyday lives, so along with the stories of major political
figures, we also find here the small, mostly unknown ones: Elfriede
Eilers alongside Pericles, Chilean miners next to Napoleon, a
three-month-old baby beside Alexander the Great. Drilling through
Hard Boards is not just Kluge’s newest fiction, it is a
masterpiece of political thought.
In the historic tradition of calendar stories and calendar
illustrations, author and film director Alexander Kluge and
celebrated visual artist Gerhard Richter have composed December, a
collection of thirty-nine stories and thirty-nine snow-swept
photographs for the darkest month of the year. In stories drawn
from modern history and the contemporary moment, from mythology,
and even from meteorology, Kluge toys as readily with time and
space as he does with his characters. In the narrative entry for
December 1931, Adolf Hitler avoids a car crash by inches. In
another, we relive Greek financial crises. There are stories where
time accelerates, and others in which it seems to slow to the pace
of falling snow. In Kluge's work, power seems only to erode and
decay, never grow, and circumstances always seem to elude human
control. When a German commander outside Moscow in December of 1941
remarks, "We don't need weapons to fight the Russians but a weapon
to fight the weather," the futility of his struggle is painfully
present. Accompanied by the ghostly and wintry forest scenes
captured in Gerhard Richter's photographs, these stories have an
alarming density, one that gives way at unexpected moments to open
vistas and narrative clarity. Within these pages, the lessons are
perhaps not as comforting as in the old calendar stories, but the
subversive moralities are always instructive and perfectly
executed. Praise for Alexander Kluge"More than a few of Kluge's
many books are essential, brilliant achievements. None are without
great interest."-Susan Sontag "Alexander Kluge, that most
enlightened of writers."-W.G. Sebald
A highly engaging exploration of existential questions, written in
the midst of the Coronavirus pandemic. Â The Book of
Commentary / Unquiet Garden of the Soul confronts the reader with
questions of existential meaning, questions rendered all the more
potent by the backdrop of the Coronavirus pandemic: How fragile are
we as human beings? How fragile are our societies? What is a
“self,” an “I,”  a “community”? How are we to
orient ourselves? And what, if any, role does commentary play? In a
fashion that will be familiar to longtime admirers of Alexander
Kluge, the book stretches both back in time to the medieval
glossators of Bologna and forward into interstellar space with
imagined travel to the moon Europa. Kluge’s characteristic brief,
vignette-like prose passages are interspersed with images from his
own film work and QR codes, forming a highly engaging, thoroughly
contemporary read. Â
No human quality is more necessary for survival than love. But
while love has the power to lift us up with boundless joy, it has
equal strength to crush us—it is easy to lose your way within
love’s complex labyrinth of oppositions. The Labyrinth of Tender
Force collects 166 of Alexander Kluge’s love stories previously
concealed among his vast library of more than 2,000 texts. “Basic
stories” was what he once called them. Organized thematically,
these stories take readers on a flight over the maps—the varied
topography—of love. This flight ends on a high plateau, at the
heart of the most beautiful romances and a cardinal text of
modernity about the economy of relationships: Madame de La
Fayette’s The Princess of Cleves. The latest offering from one of
the greatest living German writers, The Labyrinth of Tender Force
masterfully explores the greatest peaks and the most dreadful
crevasses of passionate love through an inspired combination of
Kluge’s vignettes with drawings, photographs, and other archival
material culled from diverse sources.
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Air Raid (Paperback)
Alexander Kluge, Martin Chalmers, W. G. Sebald
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R262
R221
Discovery Miles 2 210
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A powerful work by the heralded writer, this collection is a
touchstone event in German literature of the post-war era. On April
8, 1945, several American bomber squadrons were informed that their
German targets were temporarily unavailable due to cloud cover. As
it was too late to turn back, the assembled ordnance of more than
two hundred bombers was diverted to nearby Halberstadt. A mid-sized
cathedral town of no particular industrial or strategic importance,
Halberstadt was almost totally destroyed, and a
then-thirteen-year-old Alexander Kluge watched his town burn to the
ground. Incorporating photographs, diagrams, and drawings, Kluge
captures the overwhelming rapidity and totality of the organized
destruction of his town from numerous perspectives, bringing to
life both the strategy from above and the futility of the response
on the ground. Originally published in German in 1977, this
exquisite report, fragmentary and unfinished, is one of Kluge's
most personal works and one of the best examples of his literary
technique. The English edition of Air Rair includes additional new
stories by the author and features an appreciation of the work by
W. G. Sebald. "More than a few of Kluge's many books are essential,
brilliant achievements. None are without great interest."-Susan
Sontag
An epochal archaeology of the labor power that has been cultivated
in the human body over the last two thousand years. If Marx's opus
Capital provided the foundational account of the forces of
production in all of their objective, machine formats, what happens
when the concepts of political economy are applied not to dead
labor, but to its living counterpart, the human subject? The result
is Alexander Kluge and Oskar Negt's History and Obstinacy, a
groundbreaking archaeology of the labor power that has been
cultivated in the human body over the last two thousand years.
Supplementing classical political economy with the insights of
fields ranging from psychoanalysis and phenomenology to
evolutionary anthropology and systems theory, History and Obstinacy
reaches down into the deepest strata of unconscious thought,
genetic memory, and cellular life to examine the complex ecology of
expropriation and resistance. First published in German 1981, and
never before translated into English, this epochal collaboration
between Kluge and Negt has now been edited, expanded, and updated
by the authors in response to global developments of the last
decade to create an entirely new analysis of "the capitalism within
us."
On October 5, 2012, the German national newspaper Die Welt
published its daily issue--but things looked . . . different.
Quieter. The sensations of the day, forgotten as soon as they're
read, were missing, replaced with an unprecedented calm, extracted
with care from the chaos of the contemporary. That calm was the
work of Gerhard Richter, who had been granted control over Die Welt
for that single day, taking over and imprinting all thirty pages of
the newspaper with his personal stamp: images from quiet moments
amid unquiet times, the demotion of politics from its primary
position, the privileging of the private and personal over the
public, and, above all, artful, moving contrasts between sharpness
and softness. He had created an unprecedented work of mass art.
Among the many people to praise the work was writer Alexander
Kluge, who instantly began writing stories to accompany Richter's
images. This book, the second collaboration between Kluge and
Richter, brings their stories and images together, along with new
words and artworks created specifically for this volume. The
result, Dispatches from Moments of Calm, is a beautiful, meditative
interval in the otherwise unremitting press of everyday life, a
masterpiece by two acclaimed artists working at the height of their
powers.
An exploration by an artist and writer duo of a fundamental
constant in the history of humankind: rage, and its impact on the
world. Rage and obstinacy are close relatives—and fundamental
categories in the work of both Georg Baselitz and Alexander Kluge.
In World-Changing Rage, these two accomplished German creators
explore links and fractures between two cultures through two media:
ink and watercolor on paper, and the written word. Â The long
history of humankind is also a history of rage, fury, and wrath. In
this book, Baselitz and Kluge explore the dynamism of rage and its
potential to rapidly grow and erupt into blazing protests,
revolution, and war. The authors also reflect the melancholy
archetype of the Western hero (and his deconstruction) against the
very different heroic ethos of the Japanese antipodes. More
powerful than rage, they argue, is wit, as displayed in the work of
Japanese master painter Katsushika Hokusai. In this volume,
Baselitz repeatedly draws an image of Hokusai, depicting him with
an outstretched finger, as if pointing towards Europe in a mixture
of rage, wrath, irony, and laughter, all-too-fleetingly evident in
his expression. A unique collaboration between two of the world’s
leading intellectuals, World-Changing Rage will leave every reader
with a deeper appreciation of the human condition.
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Pluriversum (Paperback)
Alexander Kluge; Edited by Museum Folkwang; Designed by Fabian Bremer, Pascal Storz
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R657
R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
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Pluriverse (Paperback)
Alexander Kluge; Edited by Claire Le Restif, Kathleen Rahn, Susanne Titz; Text written by Thomas Brinkmann, …
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R718
Discovery Miles 7 180
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Snows of Venice (Paperback)
Alexander Kluge, Ben Lerner; Designed by Fabian Bremer, Pascal Storz
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R767
R623
Discovery Miles 6 230
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Rage and obstinacy are close relatives--and fundamental categories
in the work of both Georg Baselitz and Alexander Kluge. In
World-Changing Rage, these two accomplished German creators explore
links and fractures between two cultures through two media: ink and
watercolour on paper, and the written word. The long history of
humankind is also a history of rage, fury, wrath. In this book,
Baselitz and Kluge explore the dynamism of rage and its potential
to rapidly grow and erupt into blazing protests, revolution, and
war. The authors also reflect the melancholy archetype of the
Western hero (and his deconstruction) against the very different
heroic ethos of the Japanese antipodes. More powerful than rage,
they argue, is wit, as displayed in the work of Japanese master
painter Katsushika Hokusai. In this volume, Baselitz repeatedly
draws an image of Hokusai, depicting him with an outstretched
finger, as if pointing towards Europe in a mixture of rage, wrath,
irony and laughter, all-too-fleetingly evident in his expression. A
unique collaboration between two of the world's leading
intellectuals, World-Changing Rage will leave every reader with a
deeper appreciation of the human condition.
Alexander Kluge is one of contemporary Germany's leading
intellectuals and artists. A key architect of the New German Cinema
and a pioneer of auteur television programming, he has also
cowritten three acclaimed volumes of critical theory, published
countless essays and numerous works of fiction, and continues to
make films even as he expands his video production to the internet.
Despite Kluge's five decades of work in philosophy, literature,
television, and media politics, his reputation outside of the
German-speaking world still largely rests on his films of the
1960s, 70s, and 80s. With the aim of introducing Kluge's
heterogeneous mind to an Anglophone readership, Difference and
Orientation assembles thirty of his essays, speeches, glossaries,
and interviews, revolving around the capacity for differentiation
and the need for orientation toward ways out of catastrophic
modernity. This landmark volume brings together some of Kluge's
most fundamental statements on literature, film, pre- and
post-cinematic media, and social theory, nearly all for the first
time in English translation. Together, these works highlight
Kluge's career-spanning commitment to unorthodox, essayistic
thinking.
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Parsifal Container (Hardcover)
Georg Baselitz; Text written by Alexander Kluge, Tristan Marquardt; Designed by Fabian Bremer, Pascal Storz
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R988
R814
Discovery Miles 8 140
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