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A carregar... Die Blechtrommel (original 1959; edição 1991)por Günter Grass
Informação Sobre a ObraThe Tin Drum por Günter Grass (Author) (1959)
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Libro marabilloso, moitas grazas ....Günter. ( ) I'm losing myself in snapshots of 'Strength Through Joy' tourists and testaments to tender 'Boy Scout' eroticism. perhaps the only kind of post-war german literature which could have achieved commercial success exculpatory / banal / funny / erotic. the Party Member of the family perceived, in retrospect, as a kind of jokester. had to believe - perhaps that's how it really was/is. agree in part with murnane (A Million Windows), the narrator is ___abdicating his obligation to the reader but the narrator is not necessary - same for much of the plot we're sniffing through Su esperpento de protagonista me recordó en no pocas ocasiones a otro personaje de igual o mayor extravagancia como es Ignatius, de La conjura de los necios, y hablo a tenor de la fascinante singularidad desprendida por ambos, pues gracias al carisma de nuestro aquí, pertinaz tamborilero (al cual a veces dan ganas de estrangular, todo sea dicho), se digiere de forma más amable el carrusel de penas de un escenario de la crudeza que el autor nos plantea, a través de la segunda guerra mundial. Hay pasajes fantásticos en todas las acepciones de la palabra, y que al igual que ocurre con García Márquez y el realismo mágico, nos someten a la incertidumbre de saber si eso que acabamos de leer ha sucedido en realidad, o es simplemente cosa de la inestable mente del pequeño Oskar, una más. Un libro maravilloso que si aún no conocen y se animan a empezar, no querrán soltar hasta acabarlo a pesar del continuo y gratuito maltrato de tambores. As the story opens, we find thirty-year-old Oskar Matzerath in a mental institution. He proceeds to tell the story of his life. It is set in Danzig (Gdańsk) from 1899, when his grandparents meet, to 1954. Oskar, at age three, is given a toy drum for his birthday, and decides to quit growing. What follows is a bizarre combination of the history of Germany and Poland, satire, and absurd fable. Oskar summarizes the plot: "Born beneath light bulbs, interrupted my growth at the age of three, was given a drum, sangshattered glass, smelled vanilla, coughed in churches,… watched ants as they crawled, decided to grow, buried the drum,… learned to carve stone and posed as a model, went back to my drum and inspected concrete, made money and cared for the finger, gave the finger away and fled as I laughed, ascended, arrested, convicted, confined, now soon to be freed." Oskar is an unreliable narrator, frequently shifting between first and third person. There is a great deal of symbolism in this book, and I am quite sure I did not “get” all of it. I spent a good amount of brain power trying to relate portions of it to WWII history. This task was only partially successful, and I found that it took more effort than it was worth. I know this is considered a 20th century classic, and I am glad I read it, but cannot say I found much pleasure in the process. I read the 50th Anniversary English translation. The Afterword by translator Breon Mitchell is worth reading. He and other translators interacted with the author to gain insight into his intent. I could feel the rhythm, intended to simulate Oskar’s drumming, in the narrative.
"Le tambour" ("Die Blechtrommel") est un roman de l'auteur allemand Günter Grass, publié en 1959. Il s'agit du premier volet de la Trilogie de Dantzig de Grass et il est considéré comme l'une des œuvres les plus importantes de la littérature allemande d'après la Seconde Guerre mondiale. L'histoire est racontée par Oskar Matzerath, un garçon né à Dantzig (aujourd'hui Gdańsk, Pologne) en 1924, qui décide à l'âge de trois ans d'arrêter de grandir physiquement. Malgré sa petite taille, Oskar possède une voix puissante et une capacité extraordinaire à briser le verre avec ses cris aigus. Le roman suit la vie d'Oskar depuis son enfance peu conventionnelle jusqu'aux événements tumultueux du XXe siècle. Avec en toile de fond la montée du nazisme, la Seconde Guerre mondiale et l'après-guerre, l'histoire d'Oskar se confond avec celle de l'Allemagne. Son point de vue unique lui permet de commenter de manière satirique et symbolique les changements sociétaux et politiques qui se produisent autour de lui. "Le tambour" explore les thèmes de l'identité, de la culpabilité et de l'impact des événements historiques sur les individus. Grass utilise le réalisme magique et l'allégorie pour créer un récit riche et complexe qui saisit l'absurdité et la brutalité de l'histoire européenne du XXe siècle. Ce roman a reçu le prix Nobel de littérature en 1999, en reconnaissance de l'œuvre littéraire de Günter Grass et de sa contribution à la littérature allemande de l'après-guerre. Pertence a SériePertence à Série da EditoraBibliothek des 20. Jahrhunderts (Dt. Bücherbund) (Grass, Günter) Delfinserien (141) dtv (11821) Fischer Bücherei (473/4) — 11 mais Meulenhoff editie (46) Oriento-Okcidento (33) Otavan kirjasto (33) Rainbow pocketboeken (243) RBA Narrativa Actual (22) Sammlung Lichterhand (SL147) Sammlung Luchterhand (147) Seuil, Points roman (R1) Está contido emTem a adaptaçãoTem como estudoTem como suplementoTem um guia de estudo para estudantesTem um guia para professoresPrémiosDistinctionsNotable Lists
Acclaimed as the greatest German novel written since the end of World War II,The Tin Drumis the autobiography of thirty-year-old Oskar Matzerath, who has lived through the long Nazi nightmare and who, as the novel begins, is being held in a mental institution. Willfully stunting his growth at three feet for many years, wielding his tin drum and piercing scream as anarchistic weapons, he provides a profound yet hilarious perspective on both German history and the human condition in the modern world.Translated from the German by Ralph Manheim. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)833.914Literature German literature and literatures of related languages German fiction Modern period (1900-) 1900-1990 1945-1990Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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