Search results for ""Author Martin Walser""
Suhrkamp Verlag Seelenarbeit
£17.00
Rowohlt Taschenbuch Ich würde heute ungern sterben
£18.00
Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH Leben Und Schreiben Tagebucher 1974-1978
£13.46
Rowohlt Taschenbuch Der Augenblick der Liebe
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Rowohlt Taschenbuch Mdchenleben oder Die Heiligsprechung
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Suhrkamp Verlag AG Der Lebenslauf der Liebe
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Suhrkamp Verlag AG Jagd
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Rowohlt Taschenbuch Statt etwas oder Der letzte Rank
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH Memer Gedanken Reisen Momente
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH ber Rechtfertigung eine Versuchung Zeugen und Zeugnisse
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH Das Leben wortwrtlich Ein Gesprch
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH Sprachlaub oder Wahr ist was schn ist Texte von Martin Walser mit Aquarellen von Alissa Walser
£25.20
Marion Boyars Publishers Ltd The Rabbit Race
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Patmos-Verlag Lieber träumen wir alles als dass wir es sagen
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Suhrkamp Verlag Die Verteidigung der Kindheit
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Rowohlt Taschenbuch Gar alles oder Briefe an eine unbekannte Geliebte
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Rowohlt Taschenbuch Muttersohn
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH Unknown Title
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH Das Traumbuch
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Marion Boyars Publishers Ltd The Rabbit Race
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Suhrkamp Verlag AG Ein springender Brunnen
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Suhrkamp Verlag Messmers Gedanken
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Suhrkamp Verlag Gesammelte Stucke
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Suhrkamp Verlag Ein fliehendes Pferd
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Rowohlt Taschenbuch Sptdienst Bekenntnis und Stimmung
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Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH Angstblute
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Rowohlt Verlag GmbH Spätdienst
£18.00
Arcade Publishing A Man in Love: A Novel
£17.99
Boydell & Brewer Ltd The Burden of the Past: Martin Walser on Modern German Identity: Texts, Contexts, Commentary
English translation, analysis, and contextualization of Walser's notorious but little-examined Peace-Prize speech and related writings. The German novelist Martin Walser's 1998 speech upon accepting the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade remains a milestone in recent German efforts to come to terms with the Nazi past. The day after the speech, Ignatz Bubis, leader of Germany's Jewish community, attacked Walser for inciting dangerous right-wing sentiment with controversial passages including the notorious statement "Auschwitz is not suited to be a moral bludgeon," thus igniting the protracted public battle of opinions known as the "Walser-Bubis Debate." The speech continues to loom large in Germany's struggle to acknowledge responsibility for Nazi crimes yet escape a suffocating burden of remembrance. But in spiteof its notoriety, little attention has been paid to what the speech actually says, as opposed to the public outcry and debate that followed it. This book presents the text of the speech, along with several of Walser's other essays and speeches about the Holocaust and its impact on German identity, in English translation. It examines them as texts, a process that involves a discussion of literary complexities and an attempt to distinguish valid criticism of German intellectual life from what is justifiably problematic. And it places this textual examination in the context of Walser's and other postwar German intellectuals' attempts to deal with the Nazi past, of German-Jewish relations in the postwar era, and of the once hidden and now -- due in part to Walser's speech -- increasingly open discourse about Germans as victims during and immediately after the Nazi era. Thomas A. Kovach is Professorof German Studies at the University of Arizona.
£32.99
Arcade Publishing A Gushing Fountain: A Novel
£17.99
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Politics and Culture in Twentieth-Century Germany
New essays on the influence of politics on 20c. German culture, not only during the Nazi and Cold War eras but in periods when the effects are less obvious. The cultural history of 20th-century Germany, more perhaps than that of any other European country, was decisively influenced by political forces and developments. This volume of essays focuses on the relationship between German politics and culture, which is most obvious in the case of the Third Reich and the German Democratic Republic, where the one-party control of all areas of life was extended to the arts; these were expected to conform to the idealsof the day. But the relationship between politics and the arts has not always been one purely of coercion, censorship, collusion, and opportunism. Many writers greeted the First World War with quite voluntary enthusiasm; others conjured up the National Socialist revolution in intense Expressionist images long before 1933. The GDR was heralded by writers returning from Nazi exile as the anti-fascist answer to the Third Reich. And in West Germany, politicsdid not dictate artistic norms, nor was it greeted with any great enthusiasm among intellectuals, but writers did tend to ally themselves with particular parties. To an extent, the pre-1990 literary establishment in the Federal Republic was dominated by a left-liberal consensus that German division was the just punishment for Auschwitz. United Germany began its existence with a fierce literary debate in 1990-92, with leading literary critics arguing that East and West German literature had basically shored up the political order in the two countries. Now a new literature was required, one that was free of ideology, intensely subjective and experimental in its aesthetic. In 1998, the author Martin Walser called for an end to the author's role as "conscience of the nation" and for the right to subjective experience. This is the first book to examine this crucial relationship between politics and culture in Germany. William Niven and James Jordan are readers in German at the University of Nottingham Trent.
£87.30