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At the Burning Abyss is Franz Fuhmann's magnum opus a gripping and
profoundly personal encounter with the great expressionist poet
Georg Trakl. It is a taking stock of two troubled lives, a
turbulent century, and the liberating power of poetry. Picking up
where his last book, The Jew Car, left off, Fuhmann probes his own
susceptibility to ideology's seductions Nazism, then socialism and
examines their antidote, the goad of Trakl's enigmatic verses. He
confronts Trakl's "unlivable life," as his poetry transcends the
panaceas of black-and-white ideology, ultimately bringing a
painful, necessary understanding of "the whole human being: in
victories and triumphs as in distress and defeat, in temptation and
obsession, in splendor and in ordure." In 1982, the German edition
of At the Burning Abyss won the West German Scholl Siblings Prize,
celebrating its "courage to resist inhumanity." At a time of
political extremism and polarization, has lost none of its urgency.
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Science Fiktion (Hardcover)
Franz Fuhmann; Translated by Andrew B B Hamilton, Claire Van Den Broek
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R649
R576
Discovery Miles 5 760
Save R73 (11%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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When a young reader once asked Franz Fühmann if he considered his
work to be science fiction, he was quick to deny it: he wanted
nothing to do with the genre. As he began writing the stories that
make up this volume, however, he found himself coming around to the
idea of a hybrid genre—what he calls in German Saiäns-Fiktschen,
`science fiktion’ with a k. In seven interlocking stories,
Science Fiktion offers a steampunk takedown of the logic of the
Cold War. In this imagined future, two nations compete for global
dominance: Uniterr, an exaggeration of the Eastern Bloc, in which
personal freedom is curtailed and life regulated with cartoonish
strictness; and Libroterr, in which the decadence of the West has
been pushed beyond all reason. The stories follow three young
citizens of Uniterr: Jirro, a young neutrinologist whose life is
forever changed by a year spent abroad in Libroterr; Janno, a
causologist condemned to a life of mediocrity in Uniterr’s
bureacracy for the briefest of impure thoughts; and Pavlo, an
inventor and a drunkard, whose mind pushes against the limits of
what his world allows. Through these three lives, Fühmann
gradually unfolds the contours of their bizarre world in a master
class of understated world making. As the reader is swept up in the
madness of Libroterr’s predator ads (which grab you on the
street) and Uniterr’s mandatory mind readings, Fühmann’s dark
comedy from the last century comes to seem all the more prescient
in ours. A German twist on an Anglophone tradition, Science Fiktion
provides a disturbing vision of the future from the other side of
the Berlin Wall.
Four classical Greek myths retold with unexpected twists by an East
German dissident. Franz Fuhmann's subversive retellings of four
Greek legends were first published in East Germany in 1980. In
them, Fuhmann plumbs the ancient tales' depths and makes them his
own. Attuned to conflict and paradox, he sheds light on the
complexities of sex and love, art and beauty, politics and power.
In the title story, the love of the goddess Eos for the mortal
Tithonos reveals the blessing and curse of transience, while "Hera
and Zeus" probes the divine couple's tumultuous relationship and
its devastating consequences for a world embroiled in war.
Fuhmann's unflinching account of Marsyas' flaying by Apollo has
been widely read as a dissident political statement that has lost
none of its incisive force. At times charged with sensuality, and
at others honed to a keen analytical edge, Fuhmann's shimmering
prose is matched by Sunandini Banerjee's exquisite collages.
Originally published in 1962, Franz Fühmann’s autobiographical
story cycle The Jew Car is a classic of German short fiction and an
unparalleled examination of the psychology of National Socialism.
Each story presents a snapshot of a personal and historical turning
point in the life of the narrator, beginning with childhood
anti-Semitism and moving to a youthful embrace—and then an
ultimate rejection—of Nazi ideology. With scathing irony and
hallucinatory intensity, reflections on the nature of memory, and
the individual experience of history, the cycle acquires the weight
of a novel.
Franz Fuhmann's magnum opus. At the Burning Abyss is a gripping and
profoundly personal encounter with the great expressionist poet
Georg Trakl. It is a taking stock of two troubled lives, a
turbulent century, and the liberating power of poetry. Picking up
where his last book, The Jew Car, left off, Fuhmann probes his own
susceptibility to ideology's seductions-Nazism, then socialism-and
examines their antidote, the goad of Trakl's enigmatic verses. He
confronts Trakl's "unlivable life," as his poetry transcends the
panaceas of black-and-white ideology, ultimately bringing a
painful, necessary understanding of "the whole human being: in
victories and triumphs as in distress and defeat, in temptation and
obsession, in splendor and in ordure." In 1982, the German edition
of At the Burning Abyss won the West German Scholl Siblings Prize,
celebrating its "courage to resist inhumanity." At a time of
political extremism and polarization, has lost none of its urgency.
Originally published in 1962, Franz Fuhmann's autobiographical
story cycle "The Jew Car" is a classic of German short fiction and
an unparalleled examination of the psychology of National
Socialism. Each story presents a snapshot of a personal and
historical turning point in the life of the narrator, beginning
with childhood anti-Semitism and moving to a youthful embrace--and
then an ultimate rejection--of Nazi ideology. With scathing irony
and hallucinatory intensity, reflections on the nature of memory,
and the individual experience of history, the cycle acquires the
weight of a novel.
"Fuhmann's work, beginning with "The Jew Car," can be read as a
great literary self-analysis in the spirit of Freud. Through his
work, he not only became conscious of his own thinking as it was
seduced by totalitarianism, he also became capable of describing
the mechanisms of a fascist upbringing with striking poetic power,
transcending all theory." --"Die Welt," on the German edition
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