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Literary Nonfiction. Philosophy. Economics & Statistics.
Translated from the German by Karen Leeder. Acclaimed poet,
essayist, and cultural critic Hans Magnus Enzensberger takes a
fresh, sobering look at our faith in statistics, our desire to
predict the future, and our dependence on fortuitousness. Tracing
the interface between chance and probability in medical
diagnostics, risk models, economics, and the fluctuations of
financial markets, FATAL NUMBERS goes straight to the heart of what
it means to live, plan, and make decisions in a globalized,
digitized, hyperlinked, science-driven, and uncertain world.
Foreword by Gerd Gigerenzer. Illustrations by David Fried.
In twelve dreams, Robert, a boy who hates math, meets a Number
Devil, who leads him to discover the amazing world of numbers:
infinite numbers, prime numbers, Fibonacci numbers, numbers that
magically appear in triangles, and numbers that expand without end.
As we dream with him, we are taken further and further into
mathematical theory, where ideas eventually take flight, until
everyone -- from those who fumble over fractions to those who solve
complex equations in their heads -- winds up marveling at what
numbers can do.
A unique portrait of a revolutionary movement that is largely
unknown outside Spain. Northern Spain is the only part of Western
Europe where anarchism played a significant role in the political
life of the twentieth century. Enjoying wide-ranging support among
both the urban and rural working class, its importance peaked
during its “brief summerâ€â€”the civil war between the Republic
and General Franco’s Falangists, during which anarchists even
participated in the government of Catalonia.  Anarchy’s
Brief Summer brings anarchism to life by focusing on the
charismatic leader Buenaventura Durruti (1896–1936), who became a
key figure in the Spanish Civil War after a militant and
adventurous youth. The basis of the book is a compilation of texts:
personal testimony, interviews with survivors, contemporary
documents, memoirs, and academic assessments. They are all linked
by Enzenberger’s own assessment in a series of glosses—a
literary form that is somewhere between retelling and
reconstruction—with the contradiction between fiction and fact
reflecting the political contradictions of the Spanish
Revolution.Â
A unique and modern approach to money, wealth, greed, and financial
ignorance presented via a story of a family in the Munich suburbs.
The Federmanns live a pleasant but painfully normal life in the
Munich suburbs. All that the three children really know about money
is that there’s never enough of it in their family.  Every
so often, their impish Great-Aunt Fé descends on the city. After
repeated cycles of boom and bust, profligacy and poverty, the grand
old lady has become enormously wealthy and lives alone in a villa
on the shore of Lake Geneva. But what does Great-Aunt Fé want from
the Federmanns, her only surviving relatives? This time, she
invites the children to tea at her luxury hotel where she spoils,
flummoxes, and inspires them. Dismayed at their ignorance of the
financial ways of the world, she gives them a crash course in
economics that piques their curiosity, unsettles their parents, and
throws open a whole new world. The young Federmanns are for once
taken seriously and together they try to answer burning questions:
Where does money come from? Why are millionaires and billionaires
never satisfied? And why are those with the most always showered
with more? Â In this rich volume, the renowned poet,
translator, and essayist Hans Magnus Enzensberger turns his gimlet
eye on the mechanisms and machinations of banks and
politicians—the human greed, envy, and fear that fuels the global
economy. A modern, but moral-less fable, Money, Money, Money! is
shot through with Enzensberger’s trademark erudition, wit, and
humanist desire to cut through jargon and forearm his readers
against obscurantism. Â
One of Germany's greatest living writers offers up an analysis (and
samples) of his failed projects. "My dear fellow artists, whether
writers, actors, painters, film-makers, singers, sculptors, or
composers, why are you so reluctant to talk about your minor or
major failures?" With that question, Hans Magnus Enzensberger-the
most senior among Germany's great writers-begins his amusing
ruminations on his favorite projects that never saw the light of
day. There is enlightenment in every embarrassing episode, he
argues, and while artists tend to forget their successes quickly,
the memory of a project that came to nothing stays in the mind for
years, if not decades. Triumphs hold no lessons for us, but fiascos
can extend our understanding, giving insight into the conditions of
production, conventions, and practices of the industries concerned,
and helping novices to assess the snares and minefields in the
industry of their choice. What's more, Enzensberger argues, flops
have a therapeutic effect: They can cure, or at least alleviate,
the vocational illnesses of authors, be it the loss of control or
megalomania. In Gone but Not Forgotten, Enzensberger looks back at
his uncompleted experiments not just in the world of books but also
in cinema, theater, opera, and journal publishing, and shares with
us a "store of ideas" teeming with sketches of still-possible
projects. He also reflects on the likely reasons for these big and
small defeats. Interspersed among his ruminations are excerpts from
those experiments, giving readers a taste of what we missed.
Together, the pieces in this volume build a remarkable picture of a
versatile genius's range of work over more than half a century and
make us reflect on the very nature of success and failure by which
we measure our lives.
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Panopticon (Hardcover)
Hans Magnus Enzensberger; Translated by Tess Lewis
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R577
Discovery Miles 5 770
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Hans Magnus Enzensberger takes the title for this collection of
daring short essays on topical themes politics, economics,
religion, society not from Jeremy Bentham's famous prison but from
a mid-1930s Cabinet of Curiosities opened in Germany by Karl
Valentin. "There," writes Enzensberger, "viewers could admire,
along with implements of torture, all manner of abnormalities and
sensational inventions." And that's what he offers here: a
wide-ranging, surprising look at all manner of strange aspects of
our contemporary world. As masterly with the essay as he is with
fiction and poetry, Enzensberger here presents complicated thoughts
with a light touch, tying new iterations of old ideas to their
antecedents, quoting liberally from his forebears, and presenting
himself unapologetically as not an expert but a seeker.
Enzensberger the essayist works in the mode of Montaigne, unafraid
to take his reader in unexpected directions, knowing that the
process of exploration is often in itself sufficient reward for
following a line of thought. ?In an era that regularly laments the
death of the public intellectual, Enzensberger is the real deal: a
towering figure in German literature who refuses to let his mind or
work be bound by the narrow world of the poetry or fiction section.
Panopticon will thrill readers daring enough to accompany him.
The Federmanns live a pleasant but painfully normal life in the
Munich suburbs. All that the three children really know about money
is that there's never enough of it in their family. Every so often,
their impish Great-Aunt Fe descends on the city. After repeated
cycles of boom and bust, profligacy and poverty, the grand old lady
has become enormously wealthy and lives alone in a villa on the
shore of Lake Geneva. But what does Great-Aunt Fe want from the
Federmanns, her only surviving relatives? This time, she invites
the children to tea at her luxury hotel where she spoils,
flummoxes, and inspires them. Dismayed at their ignorance of the
financial ways of the world, she gives them a crash course in
economics that piques their curiosity, unsettles their parents, and
throws open a whole new world. The young Federmanns are for once
taken seriously and together they try to answer burning questions:
Where does money come from? Why are millionaires and billionaires
never satisfied? And why are those with the most always showered
with more? In this rich volume, the renowned poet, translator, and
essayist Hans Magnus Enzensberger turns his gimlet eye on the
mechanisms and machinations of banks and politicians-the human
greed, envy, and fear that fuels the global economy. A modern, but
moral-less fable, Money, Money, Money! is shot through with
Enzensberger's trademark erudition, wit, and humanist desire to cut
through jargon and forearm his readers against obscurantism.
One should always only adhere to what he doesn't say. Any new book
by poet, essayist, writer, and translator Hans Magnus Enzensberger,
one of the world's most influential and internationally renowned
German intellectuals, is cause for notice and reflection, and Mr.
Zed's Reflections is no exception. Every afternoon for almost a
year, a plump man named Mr. Zed comes to the same spot in the city
park and engages passers-by with these quick-witted repartees.
Those who pass ask, who is this man? A wisecracker, a clown, a
belligerent philosopher? Many shake their heads and move on; others
listen to him, engage with him, and, again and again, end up at the
same place. He doesn't write anything down but his listeners often
take notes. With predilection, subversive energy and masterful
brevity, Mr. Zed undermines arrogance, megalomania, and false
authority. A determined speaker, who doesn't care for ambitions, he
forces topics that others would rather keep to themselves.
Reluctant to trust institutions and seeing absolutely nothing as
"non-negotiable", he admits mistakes and does away with judgment.
He is no mere ventriloquist of his creator - he is too stubborn for
that. And at the end of the season, when it becomes too cold and
uncomfortable in the park, he disappears, never to be seen again.
Collected here in this thought-provoking and unique work are the
considerations and provocations of this squat, park-bench
philosopher, giving us a volume of truths and conversations that
are clear-cut, skeptical, and fiercely illuminating.
Northern Spain is the only part of Western Europe where anarchism
played a significant role in political life of the twentieth
century. Enjoying wide-ranging support among both the urban and
rural working class, its importance peaked during its “brief
summerâ€â€”the civil war between the Republic and General
Franco’s Falangists, during which anarchists even participated in
the government of Catalonia. Anarchy’s Brief Summer brings
anarchism to life by focusing on the charismatic leader
Buenaventura Durruti (1896–1936), who became a key figure in the
Spanish Civil War after a militant and adventurous youth. The basis
of the book is a compilation of texts: personal testimony,
interviews with survivors, contemporary documents, memoirs, and
academic assessments. They are all linked by Enzenberger’s own
assessment in a series of glosses—a literary form that is
somewhere between retelling and reconstruction—with the
contradiction between fiction and fact reflecting the political
contradictions of the Spanish Revolution. On the trail of
forgotten, half-suppressed struggles, Anarchy’s Brief Summer
offers a unique portrait of a revolutionary movement that is
largely unknown outside Spain.
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New Selected Poems (English, German, Paperback)
Hans Magnus Enzensberger; Translated by Michael Hamburger, David J. Constantine, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Esther Kinsky
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R479
R441
Discovery Miles 4 410
Save R38 (8%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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As well as being Germany's most important poet, Hans Magnus
Enzensberger is a provocative cultural essayist and one of Europe's
leading political thinkers. No British poet can match him in his
range of interests and his moral passion. Enzensberger is a
cultured, learned, widely knowledgeable man, but his poems wear
their knowledge, learning and culture very lightly. Perfectly at
ease in a variety of poetic forms, he presents us again and again
with things that matter. This is intelligent and pointed poetry in
the tradition of Brecht, humanely political and generously engaged.
The poems have the ease and the lightness of real mastery. They are
moral in their insistence that human life can be lived well or
badly, that it is up to us to choose well and to act wisely.
Enzensberger is now writing with an increasing awareness of
mortality, yet addresses social and political dangers and evils
with undiminished urgency. This is a dual language edition
expanding Enzensberger's earlier Bloodaxe Selected Poems with work
from his later collections Kiosk, Lighter Than Air and A History of
Clouds. The translations are by Enzensberger himself and by Michael
Hamburger, David Constantine and Esther Kinsky.
In these 99 meditations, poet and novelist Hans Magnus Enzensberger
celebrates the tenacity of the normal and routine in everyday life,
where the survival of the objects we use without thinking--a pair
of scissors, perhaps--is both a small, human victory and a quiet
reminder of our own ephemeral nature. He sets his quotidian
reflections against a broad historical and political backdrop: the
cold war and its accompanying atomic threat; the German student
revolt; would-be socialism in Cuba, China, and Africa; and World
War II as experienced by the youthful poet. Enzensberger's poems
are conversational, skeptical, and serene; they culminate in the
extended set of observations that gives the collection its title.
Clouds, alien and yet symbols of human life, are for Enzensberger
at once a central metaphor of the Western poetic tradition and "the
most fleeting of all masterpieces." "Cloud archaeology," writes
Enzensberger, is "a science for angels." Praise for the German
edition "After reading this wonderful volume of poetry one would
like to call Enzensberger simply the lyric voice of transience."--
Sueddeutsche Zeitung "With this book Enzensberger reveals himself
both as a spokesman of persistence and as a decelerator."--Neue
Zuercher Zeitung
Any new book by poet, essayist, writer, and translator Hans Magnus
Enzensberger, one of the most influential and internationally
renowned German intellectuals, is cause for notice, and Mr.
Zed’s Reflections is no exception. Every afternoon for
almost a year, a plump man named Mr. Zed comes to the same spot in
the city park and engages passersby with quick-witted repartee.
Those who pass ask, who is this man? A wisecracker, a clown, a
belligerent philosopher? Many shake their heads and move on; others
listen to him, engage with him, and, again and again, end up at the
same place. He doesn’t write anything down, but his listeners
often take notes. With subversive energy and masterful brevity, Mr.
Zed undermines arrogance, megalomania, and false authority. A
determined speaker who doesn’t care for ambitions, he forces
topics that others would rather keep to themselves. Reluctant to
trust institutions and seeing absolutely nothing as
“non-negotiable,†he admits mistakes and does away with
judgment. He is no mere ventriloquist dummy for his
creator—he is too stubborn for that. And at the end of the
season, when it becomes too cold and uncomfortable in the park, he
disappears, never to be seen again. Collected in this
thought-provoking and unique work are the considerations and
provocations of this squat, park-bench philosopher, giving us a
volume of truths and conversations that are clear-cut, skeptical,
and fiercely illuminating.
The inner workings of the European Union are as much a mystery
to those living within its confines as they are to those of us who
reside elsewhere. The Brussels bureaucracy that sets many of the
EU's policies feels remote to its citizens, yet the influence of
its decisions can extend worldwide and throughout the global
marketplace. In this timely and insightful essay, Hans Magnus
Enzensberger blends reportage, argument, and analysis in order to
make sense of the EU's present political and economic roles and
examine the EU's origins and inherent contradictions. In
Enzensberger's view, Europe is involved in a project without
precedent--the first non-violent form of post-democratic
governance, which is trying to abolish the diversity of Europe and
impose a regime that is not accountable to its citizens. Its often
bizarre and arbitrary rules amount to a soft but relentless
guardianship, dictating how half a billion people should live their
lives regardless of their own political opinions and traditions.
Enzensberger here offers a strategy for approaching this modern
monster--at once gentle and giant, friend and foe. "Praise for
Enzensberger" "How should one cope with Germany? Let's ask Hans
Magnus Enzensberger. . . . One can only marvel at his permanent
alertness, his tone of cold enragement, the dimensions of his
hunger for experience, most of all however, one can only marvel at
his sense of important issues. For 50 years, time and again
Enzensberger has posed the right questions to German society. . . .
No one should ever believe Enzensberger is on his side. Whenever
someone makes a clear distinction between Good and Evil,
Enzensberger will jump out of his cover and shout: It's not that
simple."--Florian Illies, "Die Zeit"
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Tumult (Paperback)
Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Mike Mitchell
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R435
Discovery Miles 4 350
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
A collection of writings based on Enzensberger's personal
experience as a left-wing sympathizer during the 1960s. Hans Magnus
Enzensberger, widely regarded as Germany's greatest living poet,
was already well known in the 1960s, the tempestuous decade of
which Tumult is an autobiographical record. Derived from old
papers, notes, jottings, photos, and letters that the poet stumbled
upon years later in his attic, the volume is not so much about the
man, but rather the many places he visited and people whom he met
on his travels through the Soviet Union and Cuba during the 1960s.
The book is made up of four long-form pieces written from 1963 to
1970, each episode concluding with a poem and postscript written in
2014. Translated by Mike Mitchell, the book is a lively and deftly
written travelogue offering a glimpse into the history of leftist
thought. Dedicated to "those who disappeared," Tumult is a document
of that which remains one of humanity's headiest times.
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Unrecounted (Paperback)
W. G. Sebald; Translated by Michael Hamburger; Illustrated by Jan Peter Tripp; Contributions by Andrea Koehler, Hans Magnus Enzensberger
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R417
R395
Discovery Miles 3 950
Save R22 (5%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Unrecounted combines thirty-three of what W. G. Sebald called his
"micropoems" miniatures as unclassifiable as all of his works with
thirty-three exquisitely exact lithographs by one of his oldest
friends, the acclaimed artist Jan Peter Tripp. The lithographs
portray, with stunning precision, pairs of eyes the eyes of
Beckett, Borges, Proust Jasper Johns, Francis Bacon, Tripp, Sebald,
Sebald's dog Maurice. Brief as haiku, the poems are epiphanic and
anti-narrative. What the author calls "time lost, the pain of
remembering, and the figure of death" here find a small home. The
art and poems do not explain one another, but rather engage in a
kind of dialogue. "The longer I look at the pictures of Jan Peter
Tripp," Sebald comments in his essay, "the better I understand that
behind the illusions of the surface, a dread-inspiring depth is
concealed. It is the metaphysical lining of reality, so to speak."
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Panopticon (Paperback)
Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Tess Lewis
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R348
Discovery Miles 3 480
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A collection of daring short essays on topical themes, including
politics, economics, religion, society. Hans Magnus Enzensberger
takes the title for this collection not from Jeremy Bentham's
famous prison but from a mid-1930s Cabinet of Curiosities opened in
Germany by Karl Valentin. "There," writes Enzensberger, "viewers
could admire, along with implements of torture, all manner of
abnormalities and sensational inventions." And that's what he
offers here: a wide-ranging, surprising look at all manner of
strange aspects of our contemporary world. As masterly with the
essay as he is with fiction and poetry, Enzensberger here presents
complicated thoughts with a light touch, tying new iterations of
old ideas to their antecedents, quoting liberally from his
forebears, and presenting himself unapologetically as not an expert
but a seeker. Enzensberger the essayist works in the mode of
Montaigne, unafraid to take his reader in unexpected directions,
knowing that the process of exploration is often in itself
sufficient reward for following a line of thought. In an era that
regularly laments the death of the public intellectual,
Enzensberger is the real deal: a towering figure in German
literature who refuses to let his mind or work be bound by the
narrow world of the poetry or fiction section.
The Silences of Hammerstein engages readers with a blend of a
documentary, collage, narration, and fictional interviews. The
gripping plot revolves around the experiences of real-life German
General Kurt von Hammerstein and his wife and children. A member of
an old military family, a brilliant staff officer, and the last
commander of the German army before Hitler seized power,
Hammerstein, who died in 1943 before Hitler’s defeat, was
nevertheless an idiosyncratic character. Too old to be a resister,
he retained an independence of mind that was shared by his
children: three of his daughters joined the Communist Party, and
two of his sons risked their lives in the July 1944 Plot against
Hitler and were subsequently on the run till the end of the war.
Hammerstein never criticized his children for their activities, and
he maintained contacts with the Communists himself and foresaw the
disastrous end of Hitler’s dictatorship. In The Silences of
Hammerstein, Hans Magnus Enzensberger offers a brilliant and
unorthodox account of the military milieu whose acquiescence to
Nazism consolidated Hitler’s power and of the heroic few who
refused to share in the spoils.
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Tumult (Hardcover)
Mike Mitchell; Hans Magnus Enzensberger
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R687
Discovery Miles 6 870
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Hans Magnus Enzensberger, widely regarded as Germany's greatest
living poet, was already well known in the 1960s, the tempestuous
decade of which Tumult is an autobiographical record. Derived from
old papers, notes, jottings, photos, and letters that the poet
stumbled upon years later in his attic, the volume is not so much
about the man, but rather the many places he visited and people
whom he met on his travels through the Soviet Union and Cuba during
the 1960s. The book is made up of four longform pieces written from
1963 to 1970, each episode concluding with a poem and postscript
written in 2014. Tumult is based on Enzensberger's personal
experience as a left-wing sympathizer during that tumultuous decade
and focuses on political events and their participants. Translated
by Mike Mitchell, the book is a lively and deftly written
travelogue offering a glimpse into the history of leftist thought.
Dedicated to "those who disappeared," Tumult is a document of that
which remains one of humanity's headiest times. "Enzensberger is
the most important postwar writer you have never read." London
Review of Books
Despues del exito obtenido con su anterior libro, El diablo de los
numeros, el escritor aleman Hans Magnuest Enzensberger vuelve a
sorprendernos con Donde has estado, Robert?, un viaje por el tiempo
y la historia gracias a las imagenes. A Robert, el joven
protagonista, le basta ver una imagen - ya sea en la television, en
el cine, en un cuadro o en una fotografia - para introducirse en la
escena que contempla. Es asi como el lector viajara por distintos
paises y epocas: la Alemania nazi, la guerra de los Treinta Anos o
la revolucion rusa seran escenarios de estos siete viajes, de estas
siete aventuras diferentes que nos haran entender que detras de
cada imagen existe una historia, un mundo, una epoca, y que el
deber de cada uno es preguntarse sobre su significado.
In this highly acclaimed and entertaining book, already "among the
touchstones of the new travel writing" ("Newsweek"), one of West
Germany's leading authors takes us on an insider's tour of Europe
in the recent past. Focusing on Italy, Poland, Hungary, Sweden,
Spain, and Portugal, he describes how Europe has been moving toward
a new identity.
Enzensberger makes a witty and knowledgeable traveling companion,
delving into surprising corners and byways--from the back alleys of
Budapest to the halls of the Italian mint--and striking up
conversations with everyone from bankers to revolutionaries,
astrologers to apparatchiks. In the process, he suggests that
Europe's strength lies increasingly in embracing diversity and
improvisation, not bigness and regimentation. He enables us to see
with fresh eyes one of the most exciting parts of the world today.
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Political Crumbs (Paperback)
Hans Magnus Enzensberger; Translated by Martin Chalmers
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R581
Discovery Miles 5 810
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Essays cover Eurocentrism, democracy in modern Germany, economic
policies, and socialism.
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