The Bitter Taste of Victory: Life, Love and Art in the Ruins of the Reich
Autor Lara Feigelen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 noi 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408845134
ISBN-10: 140884513X
Pagini: 464
Ilustrații: 2 x 8pp B&W plates
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 140884513X
Pagini: 464
Ilustrații: 2 x 8pp B&W plates
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
The story of the cultural rehabilitation of Germany told as never before and with unprecedented immediacy through the eyes of very well-known figures of art, literature and film
Notă biografică
Dr Lara Feigel is a Senior Lecturer in English at King's College London, where her research is centred on the 1930s and the Second World War. She is the author of Literature, Cinema and Politics, 1930-1945 and the editor (with Alexandra Harris) of Modernism on Sea: Art and Culture at the British Seaside and (with John Sutherland) of the New Selected Journals of Stephen Spender. She has also written journalistic pieces for various publications, including the Guardian, Prospect and History Today. Her most recent book, The Love-charm of Bombs, was published to critical acclaim in 2013. Lara lives in West Hampstead, London.
Recenzii
Urgent, absorbing, and quietly devastating, The Bitter Taste of Victory is a superb achievement. Few books catch so well the strange energy of the war's immediate aftermath, the half-crazed adrenalin and slow-burning despair
Feigel entwines politics and passion, the wide screen of history and the close-up of desire among the ruins ... Always illuminating and richly textured
A fascinating story, brilliantly told
In this panoramic book, which manages to blend a grand historical sweep with fascinating personal detail, Lara Feigel succeeds brilliantly in capturing life in post-war Germany, as filtered through the eyes of British and American intellectuals ... Feigel does a brilliant job of shining a spotlight on this complicated moral universe. Without pause or stumble she takes us from champagne receptions to bombed-out factories. Along the way we meet a fascinating cast of characters, all attempting to make sense of a unique historical moment, one where the distinction between good and evil is no longer clear for all to see
Stealing up from the mound of corpses and fallen masonry come glamour, famous names and an account of the collapse of the most famous literary relationships of the mid-twentieth century, the marriage between Ernest Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn ... Feigel is excellent on the constant attempts to domesticate the evil that welled up on all sides . The long-term cultural consequences of 1939-1945 are still being worked out, but this is a fascinating account of the early field work that kicked them into gear
Well researched and beautifully written
An ambitious book, ranging across a sea of events and characters and filled with enjoyable details
Feigel has an affinity with rubble. a scholarly and engrossing book
A brilliant depiction of the Allies' encounter with the broken soul of Germany
Lara Feigel's absorbing book relives the era in all its uncertainty, and delves into the irreconcilable differences and contradictions that would come to thwart the project . She makes a sympathetic narrator, and has certainly unearthed some fascinating material
Innovative, entertaining and worthwhile
Inimitable . In part, it is a story of personal reconstruction, particularly of the Mann family members, but in another sense it is a story of failure, of missed opportunity . A masterful job . This is uniquely nuanced history
Compelling
Feigel entwines politics and passion, the wide screen of history and the close-up of desire among the ruins ... Always illuminating and richly textured
A fascinating story, brilliantly told
In this panoramic book, which manages to blend a grand historical sweep with fascinating personal detail, Lara Feigel succeeds brilliantly in capturing life in post-war Germany, as filtered through the eyes of British and American intellectuals ... Feigel does a brilliant job of shining a spotlight on this complicated moral universe. Without pause or stumble she takes us from champagne receptions to bombed-out factories. Along the way we meet a fascinating cast of characters, all attempting to make sense of a unique historical moment, one where the distinction between good and evil is no longer clear for all to see
Stealing up from the mound of corpses and fallen masonry come glamour, famous names and an account of the collapse of the most famous literary relationships of the mid-twentieth century, the marriage between Ernest Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn ... Feigel is excellent on the constant attempts to domesticate the evil that welled up on all sides . The long-term cultural consequences of 1939-1945 are still being worked out, but this is a fascinating account of the early field work that kicked them into gear
Well researched and beautifully written
An ambitious book, ranging across a sea of events and characters and filled with enjoyable details
Feigel has an affinity with rubble. a scholarly and engrossing book
A brilliant depiction of the Allies' encounter with the broken soul of Germany
Lara Feigel's absorbing book relives the era in all its uncertainty, and delves into the irreconcilable differences and contradictions that would come to thwart the project . She makes a sympathetic narrator, and has certainly unearthed some fascinating material
Innovative, entertaining and worthwhile
Inimitable . In part, it is a story of personal reconstruction, particularly of the Mann family members, but in another sense it is a story of failure, of missed opportunity . A masterful job . This is uniquely nuanced history
Compelling