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Gone But Not Forgotten: My Favourite Flops and Other Projects that Came to Nothing [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x41 mm
  • Serija: The German List
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: Seagull Books London Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0857429779
  • ISBN-13: 9780857429773
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x41 mm
  • Serija: The German List
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: Seagull Books London Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0857429779
  • ISBN-13: 9780857429773
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
One of Germany’s greatest living writers offers up an analysis (and samples) of his failed projects.
 
“My dear fellow artists, whether writers, actors, painters, film-makers, singers, sculptors, or composers, why are you so reluctant to talk about your minor or major failures ” With that question, Hans Magnus Enzensberger—the most senior among Germany’s great writers—begins his amusing ruminations on his favorite projects that never saw the light of day. There is enlightenment in every embarrassing episode, he argues, and while artists tend to forget their successes quickly, the memory of a project that came to nothing stays in the mind for years, if not decades. Triumphs hold no lessons for us, but fiascos can extend our understanding, giving insight into the conditions of production, conventions, and practices of the industries concerned, and helping novices to assess the snares and minefields in the industry of their choice. What’s more, Enzensberger argues, flops have a therapeutic effect: They can cure, or at least alleviate, the vocational illnesses of authors, be it the loss of control or megalomania. In Gone but Not Forgotten, Enzensberger looks back at his uncompleted experiments not just in the world of books but also in cinema, theater, opera, and journal publishing, and shares with us a “store of ideas” teeming with sketches of still-possible projects. He also reflects on the likely reasons for these big and small defeats. Interspersed among his ruminations are excerpts from those experiments, giving readers a taste of what we missed. Together, the pieces in this volume build a remarkable picture of a versatile genius’s range of work over more than half a century and make us reflect on the very nature of success and failure by which we measure our lives.

Recenzijos

"Failure is now a trend: artists hold exhibitions on imperfection, scholars compile CVs of their near-misses and business gurus advice is to 'fail better'. Writing about ones flops, though, is a tricky proposition. Failure is only interesting when it happens to the wildly successful and even they might struggle to reveal the defeats that still sting, the ones most worth reading about. At 93, Hans Magnus Enzensberger has been prolific enough as a poet, essayist, translator and editor to be able to air his disappointments." * Times Literary Supplement *

Premises 1(4)
My Failed Film Projects
5(56)
Jonas
9(3)
Traitors
12(5)
Lichtenberg
17(11)
Humboldt
28(29)
Hammerstein
57(2)
Josephine and Me
59(2)
My Failed Operatic Projects
61(52)
La Cubana
65(4)
Politburo
69(9)
Operette morali
78(23)
La boite
101(12)
My Failed Theatrical Projects
113(34)
The Tortoise
115(2)
Parvus
117(11)
The Daughter of the Air
128(8)
Without Us. A Dialogue of the Dead
136(8)
Jacques and His Master
144(3)
Publishing Projects That Came To Nothing
147(44)
Gulliver
149(10)
TransAtlantik
159(4)
The Intelligencer
163(6)
The Frankfurter Allgemeine Library
169(2)
My Literary Projects That Came To Nothing
Children and Money
171(18)
My Etcetera Projects That Came To Nothing
189(10)
The Fountain of Poetry
191(6)
A Help-Yourself Store of Ideas
197(2)
Ideas For Films
199(64)
The Switch
201(10)
Die Spanische Wand
211(6)
The Three Wise Men from the Orient
217(20)
Fraternal Strife
237(2)
A Brief Chronicle
239(14)
The Smell of Art
253(6)
Himmler's Hostages
259(4)
Ideas For The Music Theatre
263(14)
King Kongo. An Operetta
265(6)
Rosamunde
271(6)
Ideas For The Theatre
277(22)
Marx and Engels. A Revue
279(12)
Missionaries
291(4)
Brain Theatre
295(4)
Ideas For Publications
299(18)
Dummy
301(2)
The Bulletin
303(4)
The Hundred Pages
307(4)
Story
311(6)
Postscript 317(2)
The Remarkable Rocket 319
Hans Magnus Enzensberger, often considered Germanys most important living poet, is also the editor of the book series Die Andere Bibliothek and the founder of the monthly TransAtlantik. Seagull Books has published many of his books, including, most recently, Tumult, Panopticon, and Anarchys Brief Summer. Mike Mitchell has worked as a literary translator since 1995. He was awarded the 1998 Schlegel-Tieck Prize for his translation of Herbert Rosendorfers Letters Back to Ancient China. For Seagull Books, he has translated works by Ingeborg Bachmann, Max Frisch, Hans Magnus Enzensberger and Peter Handke, among others.