For the Dying Calves

Beyond Literature: Oxford Lectures

Durs Grünbein author Karen Leeder translator

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Seagull Books London Ltd

Published:25th Mar '22

Should be back in stock very soon

For the Dying Calves cover

Poetically written and originally given as lectures, this is a moving essay collection from Durs Grünbein.

In his four Lord Weidenfeld Lectures held in Oxford in 2019, German poet Durs Grünbein dealt with a topic that has occupied his mind ever since he began to perceive his own position within the past of his nation, his linguistic community, and his family: How is it possible that history can determine the individual poetic imagination and segregate it into private niches? Shouldn’t poetry look at the world with its own sovereign eyes instead?
 
In the form of a collage or “photosynthesis,” in image and text, Grünbein lets the fundamental opposition between poetic license and almost overwhelming bondage to history appear in an exemplary way. From the seeming trifle of a stamp with the portrait of Adolf Hitler, he moves through the phenomenon of the “Führer’s streets” and into the inferno of aerial warfare. In the end, Grünbein argues that we are faced with the powerlessness of writing and the realization, valid to this day, that comes from confronting history. As he muses, “There is something beyond literature that questions all writing.”

"Drawing on writers such as Hannah Arendt, Viktor Klemperer, Heiner Müller, and W. G. Sebald (among others), Grünbein describes the current state of German national psychology as still recovering from its Nazi past, still searching for its own appropriate literature." * Choice *
"These lectures identify Grünbein as both a poet and a German struggling to come to terms with his language. Grünbein interweaves sensitive readings of sociology, philosophy and contemporary diarists in an attempt to make some sense of the contentious subject of Germanness." * Times Literary Supplement *

ISBN: 9780857429544

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm

Weight: unknown

164 pages