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Autor(en): 
  • Georges Didi-Huberman
  • Samuel E. Martin
  • BARK 
     

    (Buch)
    Dieser Artikel gilt, aufgrund seiner Grösse, beim Versand als 2 Artikel!


    Übersicht

    Auf mobile öffnen
     
    Lieferstatus:   Auf Bestellung (Lieferzeit unbekannt)
    Veröffentlichung:  Oktober 2017  
    Genre:  Architektur, Archäologie, Kunst 
     
    20th Century / 20th century, c 1900 to c 1999 / Army / army books / Autobiography / autobiography books / Battles / biographies and memoirs
    ISBN:  9780262036849 
    EAN-Code: 
    9780262036849 
    Verlag:  MIT Press 
    Einband:  Gebunden  
    Sprache:  English  
    Dimensionen:  H 178 mm / B 127 mm / D 16 mm 
    Gewicht:  260 gr 
    Seiten:  136 
    Illustration:  19 B&W ILLUS. 
    Bewertung: Titel bewerten / Meinung schreiben
    Inhalt:
    A noted French thinker's poignant reflections, in words and photographs, on his visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau.

    On a visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau, Georges Didi-Huberman tears three pieces of bark from birch trees on the edge of the site. Looking at these pieces after his return home, he sees them as letters, a flood, a path, time, memory, flesh. The bark serves as a springboard to Didi-Huberman's meditations on his visit, recorded in this spare, poetic, and powerful book. Bark is a personal account, drawing not on the theoretical apparatus of scholarship but on Didi-Huberman's own history, memory, and knowledge.

    The text proceeds as a series of reflections, accompanied by Didi-Huberman's photographs of the visit. The photographs are not meant to be art—Didi-Huberman confesses that he "photographed practically everything without looking”—but approach it nevertheless. Didi-Huberman tells us that his grandparents died at Auschwitz, but his account is more universal than biographical. As he walks from place to place, he observes that in German birches are birken; Birkenau designates the meadow where the birches grow. Didi-Huberman sees and photographs the "reconstructed” execution wall; the floors of the crematorium, forgotten witnesses to killing; and the birch trees, lovely but also resembling prison bars. Taking his own photographs, he thinks of the famous photographs taken in 1944 by a member of the Sonderkommando, the only photographic documentation of the camp before the Germans destroyed it, hoping to hide the evidence of their crimes. Didi-Huberman notices a "bizarre proliferation of white flowers on the exact spot of the cremation pits.” The dead are not departed.

      



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