9783518417225-3518417223-Porzellan

Porzellan

ISBN-13: 9783518417225
ISBN-10: 3518417223
Author: Durs Grünbein
Publication date: 2005
Publisher: Suhrkamp Verlag KG
Format: Hardcover 49 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9783518417225
ISBN-10: 3518417223
Author: Durs Grünbein
Publication date: 2005
Publisher: Suhrkamp Verlag KG
Format: Hardcover 49 pages

Summary

Porzellan (ISBN-13: 9783518417225 and ISBN-10: 3518417223), written by authors Durs Grünbein, was published by Suhrkamp Verlag KG in 2005. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Porzellan (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Porcelain is a book-length cycle of forty-nine poems written over the course of more than a decade that together serve as a lament for Durs Grünbein’s hometown, Dresden, which was destroyed in the Allied firebombing of February 1945. The book is at once a history and “declaration of love” to the famed “Venice on the Elbe,” so catastrophically razed by British bombs; a musical fusion of eyewitness accounts, family memories, and stories, of monuments and relics; the story of the city’s destiny as seen through a prism of biographical enigmas, its intimate relation to the “white gold” porcelain that made its fortune and reflections on the power and limits of poetry. Musical, fractured, ironic, and elegiac, Porcelain is controversial, too, in setting itself against what Grünbein calls the “myth” of the Germans as innocent victims of a war crime. At the same time, it never loses sight of the horror deliberately visited on an unwitting civilian population, nor the devastation that looms so large in the German memory. Published for the first time in English, on the seventy-fifth year anniversary of the firebombing, this edition contains new images, notes, Grünbein’s own reflections and an additional canto—an extraordinary act of poetic kintsugi for the fractured remains of Dresden’s memory.

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