tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle March 17, 2019 2:30pm-3:00pm CET
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how about taking a few risks you could even take a chance on love. don't expect happy endings. to the church. jet ski. and now august twenty one with one hundred must reads. never before has there been a project like this one w.'s one hundred most read speeches videos interviews and of course a carefully curated list of one hundred german language novels that have been chosen they fit into english whether you're a passionate reader or a new german but this compilation features something for everyone. our experts plowed through a century of literature and selected novels that will change your view of german
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language culture and europe so many stories to tell you could fall books with we provide a fresh look at classics by all this folklore spun to your follows a thing sounds like a man in leather jackets a cliche which is true and not true. most folks don't require a mouthguard but most folks are being frugal or in. delhi in january twenty nine thousand the projects creators have been accused of and david leavitt's visited india's biggest book fair. danny was one stop of the darts of other projects won't. taipei was another. germany was guest of honor at taiwan's largest book fair. one hundred must read it was presented to both audiences and experts at the german story stands. in.
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the list has been translated into both chinese and spanish with more languages to follow. the compilation has been widely discussed liked and shared online one hundred german mastering it's a one of a kind project which took months to create. together we. thousands upon thousands of pages. there were some books that we thought we wanted to include that we started reading and we were you know actually maybe this isn't that great there are a lot of books that people said we should have included that we figured were maybe a little bit too intellectual or too trashy we tried to get a good mixture and there of entertaining of intellectual we tried to span the history of germany and central europe and to do that in one hundred books was not that easy. no other place is the setting for as many novels on our list as berlin. where else
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to hope and failure collide so often. a city state in history inspiring story tellers. right now everyone's talking about the popular series babylon berlin. it's based on full clinchers crime novel of the same type and it plunges into the decadent world of drugs sex and violence. champagne coquet sex jazz murder if you're looking for a romp through berlin in the roaring twenty's this book is for you. the lavish t.v. version of the book directed by among others. is enjoying worldwide success flamboyant ecstatic and very true to germany's political history. where.
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the same city in the same era berlin. the iconic expression this novel by alfred do blame sublimely film for television by a fine if they are now. it's the story of fun. bieber called freshly released from prison now he wants to do everything better but he stumbles again. is a sign of a dementia get so pissed out of the rest of us should. just make sure to say the goal is to win and you can't it's a consolation. a tragic downward spiral into the cesspools of berlin this story has lost nothing of its fascination and is now being filmed yet again when it's the place where more books on our list take place than anywhere else and there's
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a reason for that berlin is where so much happens so much in twentieth century history this is the center point of world war two it's the kaiser's capital when you go back to world war one hitler's capital if you're talking about world war two it's the focal point of the cold war. and then berlin had this wall. a divided city with a wall around its western half plenty of dramatic material but the east german writer crystal balls described the tragedy of the city and the entire country. divided heaven film by convolvulus tells the story of a couple in communist east germany says he flees to west berlin and freedom she stays in the east of her own free will. is the before they were separated lovers used to look for a star where their eyes would meet what should we look for. the syrians.
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in him of the cisterns us and. so they need. two different systems of government and warded love the novel was a success on both sides of the wall. said two decades later. in west berlin spend a day going to capture the wild lifestyle in the district quite so bad. but even when you just most of us are. coming out of. the moneyman stumbles from bed to the cabin back to life from quite spare via quite sparingly still the idea that it could continue forever is oppressive. but at the bar in the bubble of nine hundred eighty nine west berlin which then bursts. still the most of. suddenly everything is different nothing in berlin remains the same
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reunification is on the horizon but who are these relatives on the other side of the wall in the east she comments on. the literature of germany and its capital berlin last divided rediscover both loved and hated. that there is no reading german literature without reading about german history and there's just there's no way around it it's what people want to read it's what authors want to write about there's this great german word fag but it's a government's one of those huge german words it means confronting the past and that's something that authors immediately after world war two in the holocaust and that's something the authors in germany are still doing today they're still trying to come to terms with germany's past. can writers accurately reflect the horrific events of the holocaust some writers
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have been able to describe the mass murder of european jews and at the same time create outstanding literature. maybe esther by a culture patrol begins with the family secret that is too awful to talk about. it involves a journey through eastern europe and a search for clues to the fate of the jewish family. the first time i no longer understood how i ever could have imagined that i had been spared somehow i knew my polish relatives had all perished siblings his mother sigmund taylor their family how else could this event did but i had never thought about them. there was an athlete of those recipes for delicious sweet sausages died with her. and grandmother or publish them rosa who had great legs and love to dance to charleston and the great grandmother who was executed by german troops in one nine hundred
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forty one her name was esther maybe. writes in german although her native language is ukrainian this linguistic diversity allows her to describe her characters with a certain detachment from life maybe esther is a very sad story but it's not melancholy it's an unusual account of the holocaust the family of cutoffs and the people who come alive again in this novel you can see within the band this one. novel austell it's is also filled with uncertainty travel and a search for clues but this is not an autobiography it is a semi fictional account of the jewish historian jacques austerlitz who is trying to recall memories that he has long since lost. one day at a train station also that sees a young boy who he realizes is his four year old self being sent by kindertransport
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to england this vision finally inspires him to go searching for his original family . oster lets his life was saved by a train later his mother was deported to auschwitz by train train stations play a key role in this novel ouster let's is a man who as a. child lost his homeland language and even his name. chances are you've seen heard and read lots of stories about world war two and the holocaust but you haven't read one like it's. becker was one of the first authors to inject a bit of humor into an otherwise tragic holocaust novel called the liar it was published in one nine hundred sixty nine the workers set up in a polish ghetto similar to the one that the author himself grew up in. most of the kabul is fictional. jacoba owns
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a cafe and distributes to his customers fake radio news reports to ghetto will soon be liberated. on video and when i try to make use of the very last possibility that keeps them from just lying down and dying with words do you understand i try to do that with words because that's all i have and then you come and tell me it's prohibited you know examines the footboard. the novel is realistic in its portrayal of life in the ghetto but it also expresses a sense of human warmth and hope. and no wonderful book that will stay with you. there's actually an amazingly high number of nobel prize winners on our list but that wasn't our criterion were we created a list for everyone so that means that yes the classics are on their. authors like how much it has cost have won the nobel prize but there are also authors on there that even experts in german literature may not know so we've got something for the
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beginners who are just coming to german language literature for the first time and something for for people who have been reading these books all their life. clearly the giants of german literature cannot simply be ignored and many are included on a detail you list are compilation features so. seven authors who have won the nobel prize for literature their works are set against some of the great historical events of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. in one such novel we have a prosperous german port city. a society in turmoil and a prominent family of merchants. these are the cornerstones in thomas months family saga wooden blocks in fact it reflects man's own upbringing he was born into a middle class family in luke back in one thousand nine hundred five his father was a great merchant man brought about the life and times that he knew well. society
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was in the grip of a recession the lives of the middle class were being turned upside down mines gooden brooks charts the rise and fall of the merchant family between decadence and rash consumerism. months novel was published in one thousand one and is considered one of the earliest examples of modern fiction it was awarded the nobel prize for literature in one thousand nine hundred nine is hard to say it's almost man who also wrote many other novels is one of our most important writers his publisher wanted to cut that novel in half luckily month didn't let him go. another example is his famous novel the tin drum told from a child's point of view why not. national socialism and world war two class portrays the german people as a nation of nazi sympathizers who refused to grow up. the film version of this work drives home this point with vivid images and.
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this book from one nine hundred fifty nine was the first major novel to deal with germany's nazi past. but people used to think that evil spirits suddenly appear to somehow suggest the german people. well that's not how it was it all took place in broad daylight on his part. was just six when the nazis came to power near the end of the war he served briefly in the vatican s.s. was finally admitted this in two thousand and six for going to class writing has always been a way to deal with the past when goss published the term drum it caused a scandal no one had written about world war two with subsequent asness such brutality and such. a towering figure in german literature and an eloquent spokesman on the darker chapters of recent german history gus was
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awarded the nobel prize for literature in one thousand nine hundred nine. the life of another nobel laureate how to milla was also shaped by totalitarian regimes she grew up in church is romania her father served in the buff in s.s. after the war crime other was deported to the soviet gulag milla emigrated to west germany in one thousand nine hundred seven and was finally able to write without government imposed censorship. i write about the broad spectrum of individuals who live in dictatorships. everyone from the true believers all the way to the dissidents. in the hunger angela how to emulate tell us the story of her mother and other ethnic germans in romania at the end of world war two thousands of ethnic germans were deported to soviet labor camps. when it was awarded the nobel
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prize in two thousand and nine some newspapers in the us asked her who had who no one says that anymore. so reading german literature even if it's in translation is really a unique opportunity for people who are not german spy. people living outside germany syria get an insider's perspective and that's something that in translation provides a unique opportunity to do. something. we visited translater katie darbyshire in berlin she's a real connoisseur of german literature and is completely involved in the works of her authors. maybe darbyshire can certainly help you out if you're looking for a good book at her favorite bookshop or at home perhaps she's even translated the
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novel into english the british born linguist is one of the most prominent translators of contemporary german literature she's written books about it and teaches literary translation what drives her. books that make you feel very deeply i love when literature can make you angry sometimes i was translating it short story. made me cry while i was translating it which is kind of manipulative but good. i like. literature that you can hear the sound of it when you when you're reading it you can hear the you can hear. the press all the where where the writers are really using the language to do something to us. for more than two decades now katie darbyshire only translates books that really move her. such as an opera stall off a novel by z.
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bilal living. it's on our list of one hundred german must read and darbyshire has translated the proviso often puzzling dark works plus she's rendered in english the books of clamens meyer who caused a stir with his stories about just after german reunification the translator really went the extra mile for miers latest novel. the hardest book to play so i managed to place with. bricks and mortar because it's very very long and it's about six whack and we still have an american publisher. chip weirdly because it's amazing. she sent a year looking for an english publisher which needed another year to get the money together and then she started translating which presented some challenges. jam and we've got zero nine. and it's not like going to tour it and then an english
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we get oh no gerry's red hot and good to trot so that kind of thing and i think i had to get permission she got the go ahead over dinner with the author the effort was worth it bricks and mortar was listed for the man booker international prize it's his baby and it's mine she says she loves interacting with the authors which sometimes goes beyond the professional. friends with some it feels very one way so i feel like i go very deep inside of work and i'm. kind of inside their brain and rethinking their thoughts in my language. but of course they don't do the thing to me. katie darbyshire experiences intensely the book she translates her blog love german books is completely dedicated to german literature several of her translation works are on our list of one hundred german
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must reads among them is of course bricks and mortar by claimants mind. women selling their bodies to make quick cash gross old men taking advantage of young girls claimants myers' novel bricks and mortar is about a nameless town in eastern germany no sooner has the regime fallen then drugs crime and prostitution come flooding in the many voices in the book are mostly women's some of them have chosen prostitution others have been forced into it and they're all just trying to get through it i have a kind of scale dirty nails and bad breath right at the top but there's no difference in the and not much and there's another scale just for breath and then when they pant at you you have to turn away carefully your head i mean so it doesn't look rude. bricks and mortar will take you want to journey through
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a dark and brutal world but with shimmers of deep humanity hope and humor. many of the authors on our list that are that are quite well known outside of of germany and central europe are writing about fantasy for instance these are authors like the children's book author cornelia foamcore who are extremely well known in the united states even in india who many of their readers don't even know are german. malibu home to some of the world's biggest stars and germany's top children's author chameleon. let's go visit. her has sold tens of millions of books across fifty countries. twelve years ago she left germany for california. america opened its arms and said we love
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your stories fantastical stories about the power of books and the imagination of young people including her international breakthrough novel in cart these days from to travel the globe to meet her readers. i was in hamburg the night the so-called president of this country was elected one could you could call him he who shall not be named like in harry potter. on and it was that night that it became clear to me that i wanted to come back to america because this is my home now and i felt i had to fight for it it's more stuff of kemp. from his home is here now with her dogs dogs and donkeys and her avocado grove she says here in the u.s. children's literature is valued much more than in germany time magazine even listed as one of the world's one hundred most influential people for inspiring young
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readers around the world children are a huge source of her inspiration. because they don't use equipment like they can hide their feelings the way grownups can most of them don't have any masks on yet that stuff they're very serious about life they still asked the big questions about life and death. whereas we grownups keep learning to filter things out so that we can just keep living the way we want to live so by then i like to see myself as the kids in this strange grown up world and reveal a few secrets to them from time to time sort of a hot. it's her love for her readers that's the secret to her global success. do you write differently now that you're writing for such an international audience it's been yes. i'm a different person now that i've been to so many countries and travelled so much and expose myself to so many cultures in my horizons are a lot brighter than a duck when i only knew hamburg. in your experience what do americans think about
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german literature and authors. kind of just something i can only speak from my own experience but i'd say that it's practically a blank slate as possible between this practice are a lot of americans surprise. german yeah. a lot of americans think that i am american or at least that i write in english that's enough english hide so they're quite surprised and also fascinated to learn that i write in german and you hear on and when i visit schools the kids always ask me cornelius say something in german from kin and thus can i ask you something in germany. well you know when i do they're completely fascinated that they really don't understand it and that i can speak it and that's the stuff. canadia phone has made working with which is still german i did she know what the neighbors one hundred via twitter and i got the. marking off to but most of her readers don't care what language she writes him
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for them it's the story the counts that scotland was follow and so was the realm of heaven the valley that the last dragons in this world has called the home for two years now. one of the things we wanted to accomplish with this list is to give people a different perspective on germany and on europe a deeper perspective and a much more humane perspective and i think that anyone who reads through this list particularly of the books that deal with german history they're going to come away with a different understanding not just of this part of the world but also of war peace violence intolerance and tolerance. that was twenty one with the creators of one of the big german mistreats the first series it
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officer my ts lena is part of germany's peacekeeping force in mali. it's a dangerous and controversial mission and it raises moral issues when they know us well. what are we doing here should we be here to offer ones. as soldier. on a mission of peace thirty minutes d.w. . what secrets lie behind these mosques. find out in an immersive experience and explore fascinating wolf cultural heritage sites. w world heritage three sixty fifty. five days in the midst of
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venezuela's crisis in a fight to get aid into the country with the convoy of fun guy don't supporters i mean an exclusive d.w. report alongside venezuelan journalist says our buddies a close look now at the country's catastrophic conditions on the way to colombia a showdown. starts march eighteenth and. what's the connection between bread flour and the european you. know guild motto b.w. correspondent and avid baker crap. turns to spin it to go about recipes for success against strategies that make a difference. baking bread. d.w.
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