Immagine dell'autore.

Erich Loest (1926–2013)

Autore di Nikolaikirche

41+ opere 192 membri 1 recensione

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: Hans Walldorf

Fonte dell'immagine: Erich Loest auf der Leipziger Buchmesse 2006 By Einsamer Schütze - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3147878

Opere di Erich Loest

Nikolaikirche (1995) 36 copie
Völkerschlachtdenkmal (1984) 18 copie
Reichsgericht (2004) 6 copie
Wildtöter und Große Schlange (1974) — Autore — 5 copie
Zwiebelmuster (1985) 5 copie
Porträt Heimat. Erzählte Landschaften (1995) — Autore — 5 copie
Prozesskosten (2007) 4 copie
Der Zorn des Schafes (1990) 4 copie

Opere correlate

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Loest, Erich
Nome legale
Loest, Erich
Altri nomi
Diksen, Bernd , Waldorf, Hans
Data di nascita
1926-02-24
Data di morte
2013-09-12
Luogo di sepoltura
Neuer Friedhof, Mittweida, Sachsen, Deutschland
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Germany
Luogo di nascita
Mittweida, Germany
Luogo di morte
Leipzig, Germany
Attività lavorative
writer
Organizzazioni
Verband Deutscher Schriftsteller (Bundesvorsitz, 1994-1997)
Premi e riconoscimenti
Hans Fallada Prize (1981)

Utenti

Recensioni

The "Battle of the Nations" outside Leipzig in October 1813 counts as one of the biggest and bloodiest battles on European soil before the First World War, and as a defining moment in European history: Napoleon's defeat by a combined force of Russians, Austrians, Swedes and Prussians marked the end of his power east of the Rhine. The battle also consolidated Prussia's standing as the dominant state in Germany, with the corresponding eclipse of Napoleon's (former) allies Saxony, Bavaria and Württemberg.

The Saxons themselves, having been on the losing side (against Prussia, rather than for Napoleon, naturally...) saw no particular reason to commemorate the battle, but after German unification they couldn't do much to escape the craze for ruining good views by putting up vast and ugly monuments to glorify the German national spirit and the Hohenzollern dynasty. A huge granite tower, looking rather like the plinth for an invisible statue, dominates the Leipzig skyline and towers over the exhibition grounds to this day. It was inaugurated just in time for the centenary of the battle in October 1913.

Loest uses the story of the battle and monument as a skeleton for a critical examination of the last 180 years in the history of his city, through the eyes of the elderly museum caretaker and former explosives expert Alfred Linden, whom we have to take as at least a slightly unreliable narrator, given that he's being interviewed by a psychiatrist after having been caught trying to blow up the monument. Linden — born two days after the monument was inaugurated — identifies with a Saxon soldier killed in the aftermath of the battle, with a 19th century antiquary collecting skulls on the battlefield, with the socialist building worker Vojchiech Machulski, and with his own father, a quarryman who cut granite slabs for the monument.

Through their eyes and/or Alfred's, we get glimpses of the process of German unification, the Turner movement, abortive attempts at revolution before 1914, the horrors of World War I, the depression and the rise of the Nazis, and the bombing of Leipzig in World War II. After the war we see the pragmatic but rather unconvincing reinvention of the Battle of the Nations as a revolutionary victory (German-Russian brotherhood...) in the war against western imperialism, and the comic "rediscovery" of the printing works where Lenin might have printed Iskra. Alfred is able to point the commissioners charged with setting up a museum to a suitably old-looking shed in the right district, and help them to get their hands on some turn-of-the-century machinery. And a stuffed squirrel...

From that point on, things start to get darker: Alfred gets into trouble with the authorities when he is assigned to work on the demolition of the Paulinerkirche and university buildings in 1968 — buildings he and his father had worked to save from destruction during the fires of 1945 — he sees the city threatened on all sides by open-cast mining for the lignite that was the DDR's only important natural resource, and he comes convinced that it is his duty to destroy the monument that the city no longer deserves.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
thorold | May 29, 2021 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
41
Opere correlate
2
Utenti
192
Popolarità
#113,797
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
1
ISBN
76
Lingue
6

Grafici & Tabelle