Search results for ""Author Thomas Hettche""
El hilo del corazón
Una novela sobre la magia de lasmarionetasFinalista del Premio Alemán del Libro 2020El Teatro de Marionetas de Augsburgo (Augsburger Puppenkiste) forma parte del ADN de Alemania desde que Jim Botón apareció por primera vez en los televisores del país en 1961. Thomas Hettche narra aquí su historia de un modo tan poético como ajustado a la realidad. El hilo del corazón es una gran novela sobre la fascinación que ejercen las marionetas y la voluntad inquebrantable de una niña que quiere dejar atrás la destrucción de la guerra.Tras una función del Teatro de Marionetas, unaniña de doce años cruza una puerta oculta y llega a un desván donde la esperan laprincesa Li Si, la parca, el gato Mikesch y una cigüeña parlante. Pero sobre todo conoce a la mujer que talló todos estos títeres, y que ahora le cuenta su historia: la de un antiguo teatro y de la familia que lo fundó y lo llevó a la fama. Comienza en la Segunda Guerra Mundial, cuando Walter O
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Kiepenheuer & Witsch GmbH Unsere leeren Herzen ber Literatur
£18.00
DuMont Buchverlag GmbH Nox
£16.11
Kiepenheuer & Witsch GmbH Woraus wir gemacht sind
£17.91
Kiepenheuer & Witsch GmbH Ludwig mu sterben
£16.19
Kiepenheuer & Witsch GmbH Nox
£16.19
Kiepenheuer & Witsch GmbH Es ist recht sehr Nacht geworden
£21.60
Edition Axel Menges Fritz Barth: Cannstatter Straße 84, Fellbach
Text in English & German. Heroic 20th-century Modernism saw the private home as a place to first test out utopian theories -- a place for free play and experimentation where new approaches could be put into action, on a small scale but no less radical. Here, where architecture and life are most closely interwoven, Frank Lloyd Wright, Gerrit Rietveld, Le Corbusier and even Konstantin Melnikov found the suitable space to give their visionary concepts a plastic reality. The house built by the architect Fritz Barth for his own use in his home town of Fellbach places itself in an ironic, possibly melancholic distance from this kind of heroic pathos, but still has this tradition as its background. So it is considered by his builder as an experiment to determine the state of architecture at the start of the 21st century -- not to apply whatever offers itself to expand the architectonic repertoire (an approach that Barth considers to be a questionable, increasingly rhetoricised form of a somewhat naïve belief in the future), but to find out what possibilities are still open to architecture and how far architecture still permits a concept of 'dwelling' in the sense the word was used by Heidegger. The result is not a backward-looking homeliness, but a structure that, as a commitment to architecture in and of itself, stands his ground like few others in its time and place. This is not least because its complexity its multi-layered, opulent fabric of allusions, references and quotations, only reveals itself gradually and with close observation behind a simple appearance targeted on the immediacy of experience and architecture. Despite the somewhat polemical intentions of its builder and inhabitant, the house is not experienced as an ideological manifesto in bricks and mortar. It is and here lies its radicality, devoted to the immediate experience of 'dwelling' in so far as it does not allow, as Thomas Hettche writes in his essay, any distinction between surface and function, life and experience.
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