Merkliste
Die Merkliste ist leer.
Der Warenkorb ist leer.
Kostenloser Versand möglich
Kostenloser Versand möglich
Bitte warten - die Druckansicht der Seite wird vorbereitet.
Der Druckdialog öffnet sich, sobald die Seite vollständig geladen wurde.
Sollte die Druckvorschau unvollständig sein, bitte schliessen und "Erneut drucken" wählen.

Peter Handke

Erzählwelten - Bilderordnungen
E-BookPDFDigital Watermark [Social-DRM]E-Book
EUR62,99

Produktbeschreibung

Der Band präsentiert die Werke Handkes von den Hornissen (1966) bis zu Das zweite Schwert (2020) in Einzelanalysen und erschließt zugleich übergreifende Orientierungen von Handkes Schreiben. Die autoreflexiven Spuren, die das experimentelle Frühwerk des Autors prägen, werden in einer mittleren Phase durch eine Rückkehr zu traditionellen Formen des epischen Erzählens und literarischen Vorbildern fortgeschrieben, die philosophisch geprägt ist. Im Spätwerk entsteht aus diesen Ansätzen eine umfassende Poetologie des Erzählens, die alle Texte miteinander vernetzt. Dabei verdichten sich schon vorher entwickelte Motive zu übergreifenden Themenkomplexen. Neben der Realität des Krieges, der Beziehung zwischen Bild und Schrift, Text und Film treten gesellschaftliche und mediale Entwicklungen der Moderne in den Vordergrund. Der Bezug von Handkes Texten auf Bilder der malerischen Tradition und visuelle Strategien seines Schreibens erhalten dabei besonderes Gewicht. 
Weiterlesen

Details

Weitere ISBN/GTIN9783476049070
ProduktartE-Book
EinbandE-Book
FormatPDF
FormatFormat mit automatischem Seitenumbruch (reflowable)
ErscheinungsortStuttgart
ErscheinungslandDeutschland
Erscheinungsdatum26.06.2020
Auflage1. Aufl. 2020
SpracheDeutsch
Dateigrösse5138742 Bytes
Illustrationen3 s/w Abbildungen, 12 farbige Abbildungen, XII, 542 S. 15 Abb., 12 Abb. in Farbe.
Artikel-Nr.9251321
KatalogVC
Datenquelle-Nr.2421036
Weitere Details

Bewertungen

Empfehlungen zu ähnlichen Produkten

After reading my collegue's review, I decided to give it a shot, being sex-related sociology amongst my fields of interest.
Ania Srinivasan deals with thorny topics which feminists have been engaging for decades with, without coming across as condescending. On the contrary, her stance on the different issues is imbued with knowledge and humbleness of not having necessarily the final answer. Her intellectual honesty is just so outstanding that - no matter if you agree with her or not - you can't help but keep the book glued to your eyes!

I hope to hear more of her publishings soon
We're zooming in and out of T. Fleischmann's life in this dazzingly beautiful piece of literature, which is exactly what its title would suggest: a fragmentory reflection on what it means to have a trans body, and how it affects Fleischmann's way of existing in time, explored through a work that is part memoir, part travelogue and part essay about the artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Fleischmann choses to literally reject all kinds of metaphor, but they also don't feel the need to spell things out - that's why this book manages to invent an unusually poetic space where things remain just as they are, capable of carrying multiple meanings at once (queer experience being the main aspect this relates to, but not exclusively so). This is a text that is messy on purpose, that is hard to grasp and at the same perfectly precise; an ode to being complexely alive in the world.
Viola Davis impresses with intensity in cinema, for television and on stage. In 'Finding me' we accompany the actress through her childhood and to the roots of her strength.
It's a tough road full of adversity, setbacks and trauma.
Viola's powerful writing is breathtaking, relentlessly honest and full of wise insights.
I really love it.
It's admittedly slightly too late for this recommendation, but then again the Italian April is arguably more equal to the German May. An absolutely delightful holiday novel about four women escaping to a romantic Italian castle for some time to themselves - only to be literally spellbound by it. Read it for the lush Italian gardens and the irresistible spring airs - maby skim over some of the more dated romantic version of musical chairs.
It's admittedly slightly too late for this recommendation, but then again the Italian April is arguably more equal to the German May. An absolutely delightful holiday novel about four women escaping to a romantic Italian castle for some time to themselves - only to be literally spellbound by it. Read it for the lush Italian gardens and the irresistible spring airs - maby skim over some of the more dated romantic version of musical chairs.
Not many authors manage to be admired and thought of as somehow 'classic' with only three books under their belt but Jo Ann Beard is one of them. Her debut essay collection "Boys of My Youth" introduced her trademark style of autofictional, highly stylized and ruminative essays that centre around keen observations of beautiful quotidian lives. After having published a novel, this collection once again returns to the literary essay. Death, its reality and propensity for forcing clarity is the theme that runs through the book. The death of a beloved dog, of a friend, of oneself indeed. Beard collects beautiful details, seemingly small things and weaves an almost spiritual literary tapestry from her material. I found myself losing her sometimes but if you trust her, an astonishing hook, a breathtakingly turned sentence will always draw you back in.
After reading my collegue's review, I decided to give it a shot, being sex-related sociology amongst my fields of interest.
Ania Srinivasan deals with thorny topics which feminists have been engaging for decades with, without coming across as condescending. On the contrary, her stance on the different issues is imbued with knowledge and humbleness of not having necessarily the final answer. Her intellectual honesty is just so outstanding that - no matter if you agree with her or not - you can't help but keep the book glued to your eyes!

I hope to hear more of her publishings soon
Her way of writing is magnificent, first and foremost. The essays were very interesting and greatly researched. At the same time there was a good balance of personal experience and societal topics. Some of the themes I had already seen docs on or read something else about. Also it was quite America-Centric, which gave it some limits.
Auch wenn ich Zweigs Sprache bisweilen als etwas schwulstig und altertümlich empfinde und die Miniaturen ein gewisses Maß an Geschichtswissen voraussetzen, haben mich viele der Handlungen gepackt. Besonders Scotts dramatische Südpolexpedition war fast unerträglich spannend.
Der ganz besondere Reiz dieses Buches ist, dass es sich um wahre Begebenheiten handelt und somit Geschichte lebendig werden lässt. Als Leser lernt man unter anderem Händel, Goethe und Tolstoi privat kennen und hat das Gefühl, mit ihnen in einem Raum zu sitzen.
In Kapuscinski's strange, genre-defying work, a choir of former courtiers whispers to him about the extravagances and eventual decline of the Ethiopian monarchy. The book sits somewhere between oral history and reportage but its strange magic is wrought through the voices of the disgraced king's servants, now in hiding and only to be met through secret doors. They describe the lavish palace, the absurd rituals and the absolute power of the king that everyone had to scrape under. Their flowery language of adoration and servitude masks hidden depths of resentment and glee. It is this contradiction, as well as the observations on possibly the last absolutist monarchy, that make this book the astonishing masterpiece it is.

Autor/in

Rolf G. Renner war Professor für Neuere deutsche Literatur an der Universität Freiburg; er hatte zahlreiche Gastprofessuren in Europa, den USA, Lateinamerika, Australien und Neuseeland inne. Schwerpunkte seiner Forschung sind die Literatur des 20. Jahrhunderts, Literatur- und Medientheorie sowie Literaturverfilmung.

Schlagworte