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Search results „Eine andere geschichte”

Blogposts (506)

»Es geht nicht um Geschichte, sondern um Geschichten.« Charles Lewinsky im Interview

from 26/08/2020

Heisse Zeiten, heisse Geschichten

from 09/04/2015

Zu Ostern ein gutes Buch: Geschichten, die Frühlingsgefühle erwecken

from 27/03/2026

Yorn - Zum Muttertag, die Geschichte eines ganz besonderen Geschenkes

from 10/05/2020

»Die Geschichte, die mir vorschwebte, gab es nicht – also musste ich sie selber schreiben.«

from 26/02/2016

»Die Geschichte wiederholt sich.« Ein Interview mit Sasha Filipenko

from 25/02/2023

Weihnachten im Taschenbuch – Geschichten für die Adventszeit

from 29/11/2024

»Bei all meinen Recherchen und Erkenntnissen über Isidors Leben hatte ich das Gefühl, ich gebe ihm eine Geschichte – SEINE Geschichte zurück.« Ein Interview mit Shelly Kupferberg - Teil 1

from 21/10/2022

Mag ich / Mag ich nicht – heute mit: Solomonica de Winter

from 04/11/2014

Astrid Rosenfeld »Sing mir ein Lied« – Die Geschichte hinter dem Buch

from 17/12/2014

Amélie Nothomb ›Der belgische Konsul‹: Ein berührender Blick auf die Geschichte ihres Vaters

from 07/07/2023

Astrid Rosenfeld: »Sing mir ein Lied. 9872 Meilen und eine Geschichte«

from 28/11/2014
More blogposts

Books and authors (2)

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Ich habe große Städte gesehen
Im Warenkorb
Jörg Fauser

I Have Seen Big Cities

Jörg Fauser’s poems from the early years, 1974 to 1979, are political, intoxicated, romantic and revelatory – newly introduced with a foreword by author Björn Kuhligk.

»We were [. . .] rebuked again and again, accused of having dragged the poem out of its noble realm onto the landfill site, amongst the broken refrigerators, the rusted beer cans, the dirty undergarments. According to this world view, if one wants to call it that, our audience mainly consists of unwashed, uneducated louts, without history, without nation; of hash addicts, whores, junkies, rock’n’roll freaks, those who are hopeless and lost to society, devoid of any accomplishment, any future . . . In reality, of course, our audience – like that of our critics – is made up of shy shorthand typists, German teachers with two Siamese cats, and at least as many future pastoral ministers as customs inspectors. And a dangerous criminal here and there; it depends very much on whether people are given the opportunity to learn to read.« 
( Jörg Fauser in tip magazine 22 /1980)

Further readings
  • Fact sheet PDF
  • Extract in German
Rainer Brambach - Ich wiege 80 Kilo, und das Leben ist mächtig
Im Warenkorb
Isabel Koellreuter, Franziska Schürch

Rainer Brambach – A Biography

This unusual Swiss artist’s biography is marking the 100th anniversary of Rainer Brambach’s birth. It is not only knowledgably researched but also entertainingly presented and featuring a picture section. At his death in 1983, the poet Rainer Brambach left behind some 140 poems and two dozen short stories – not a large body of work, but an outstanding, very distinct and refreshingly unacademic one. Deported from Switzerland, deserted from the Reich Labour Service and eventually arrested in Switzerland, the former painter, decorator and later gardener was an exceptional phenomenon in the country’s post-war literary scene. He reached his creative apex in the 1950s and 60s, when his poems appeared regularly in the prestigious literary journal Akzente – alongside the work of Enzensberger, Bachmann, Celan, Canetti and other great names of the era. Brambach was also a very close friend to his mentor, the poet Gunter Eich, his wife Ilse Aichinger and the writer and publisher Hans Bender. Franziska Schurch and Isabel Koellreuter have sifted through memories of colleagues and fellow travellers, archives and Rainer Brambach’s literary output. The result is a multi-layered and fascinating biography of an eloquent Swiss poet’s unusual life.

Further readings
  • Fact sheet PDF
Isabel Koellreuter

Isabel Koellreuter


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