“An accomplished filmmaker as well as a novelist, Kluge was trained as a lawyer and studied cultural theory with Theodor Adorno. An attorney’s reserve and gravitas are evident throughout his work. The harnessed energy is incorporated in various forms. . . . In <i>Air Raid,</i> one voice is followed by another—the testimonies of survivors, observations of reporters, explanations by American officers.”
On the Seawall
“An extraordinary book by an extraordinary artist, <i>Air Raid </i>might be seen less as a reckoning with the second world war as a manual for grappling with manufactured realities and media-filtered landscapes in the age of the drone.”
Financial Times
“Excellently and integrally translated. . . . Exquisite. . . . This multimedia work was ahead of its time, and it’s still effective; as long as aerial militarism continues to rain misery on millions, <i>Air Raid </i>remains timely.”
Rain Taxi
“A small masterpiece of exploratory fiction.”
Verso Books
"What [Kluge's] text allows us to sense is what is feels and sounds like on the ground, both as the bombs are falling and after they stop. . ."
New York Review of Books
A powerful work by the heralded writer, this collection is a touchstone event in German literature of the post-war era.
On April 8, 1945, several American bomber squadrons were informed that their German targets were temporarily unavailable due to cloud cover. As it was too late to turn back, the assembled ordnance of more than two hundred bombers was diverted to nearby Halberstadt. A mid-sized cathedral town of no particular industrial or strategic importance, Halberstadt was almost totally destroyed, and a then-thirteen-year-old Alexander Kluge watched his town burn to the ground.
The Air Raid on Halberstadt on 8 April 1945
What Does ‘Really’ Mean in Retrospect? 17 More Stories About the Air War
Dragonflies of Death
Commentary on ‘Dragonflies of Death’
The Dragonfly
The Long Paths to Knowledge
What Does ‘Really’ Mean in Retrospect?
Love 1944
Cooperative Behaviour
Fires Inside People
Zoo Animals in the Air Raids
What Holds Voluntary Actions Together?
Fire Brigade Commander W. Schönecke Reports
The Run-Up to the Catastrophe
Inexplicable Reactions in Sandstone Rock
How the ‘Flying Fortresses’ Disappeared in Lake Constance
The Gleam in the Enemy’s Eye
Total Toothache
News of Star Wars
W. G. Sebald
Between History and Natural History.
On the Literary Description of Total Destruction. Remarks on Kluge
Sources
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Alexander Kluge is one of the major German fiction writers of the late twentieth century and an important social critic. As a filmmaker, he is credited with the launch of the New German Cinema movement. Martin Chalmers is a Berlin-based translator from Glasgow. He has translated some of the best-known German-language writers, including Herta Müller, Elfriede Jelinek, and Hans Magnus Enzensberger.