Donauschwaben in den USA


Home ] Up ] 2009 Autumn Mag DS_German Culture ] 2009 Autumn Mag Life_Leisure ] [ 2009 Autumn Mag Literature_Music_Poetry ] 2009 Autumn News DS Events ] 2009 Autumn DS Obituaries ] 2009 Autumn News DS Overseas ] 2009 Autumn DS Stiftung ] 2009 Autumn News DVHH ] 2009 Autumn News History_Politics ] 2009 Autumn News DS Sport ] 2009 Autumn News DS Travel ] 2009 Autumn News LUSA Webmaster ] 2009 Facts_Genes Newsletter V8I3 ]

 

 

 

 

              LANDESVERBAND            

  NEWSLETTER AND MAGAZINE 

LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND POETRY

02/24/13

October November December   2009    Volume 4 Number 4

 

 

VISITING AUTHOR-ARTICLE

OCTOBER 2009

Herta Müller

Wins the Nobel Prize

in Literature

By Motoko Rich

New York Times

 

          Herta Müller, the Romanian-born German novelist and essayist who has written widely about the oppression of dictatorship in her native country and the unmoored life of the political exile, on Thursday won the 2009 Nobel Prize for Literature.

 

          Announcing the award in Stockholm, the Swedish Academy described Ms. Müller, “who, with the concentration of poetry and the frankness of prose, depicts the landscape of the dispossessed.” Her award comes on the 20th anniversary of the fall of Communism in Europe.

 

          Ms. Müller, 56, emigrated to Germany in 1987 after years of persecution and censorship in Romania. She is the first German writer to win the Nobel award since Günter Grass in 1999. Just four of her works have been translated into English, including the novels “The Land of Green Plums” and “The Appointment.”

“I am very surprised and still cannot believe it,” Ms. Müller said in a

statement released by her publisher in Germany. “I can’t say anything more

at the moment.”

 

          In the press conference making the announcement in Stockholm, Peter Englund, permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, said Ms. Müller had been honored because of her “very, very distinct special language, on the one hand, and on the other hand she has really a story to tell about growing up in a dictatorship . . . and growing up as a stranger in your own family.”

 

          Ms. Müller was born and raised in the German-speaking town of Nitzkydorf in Romania. Her father served in the SS during World War II and her mother was deported to the Soviet Union in 1945 and sent to a work camp in what is now Ukraine. As a university student studying German and Russian literature, Ms. Müller opposed the regime of Nicolae Ceausescu and joined Aktionsgruppe Banat, a group of dissident writers who sought freedom of speech.

 

          She wrote her first work, a collection of short stories, in 1982 while working as a translator for a factory. The stories were censored by the Romanian authorities and Ms. Müller was fired from the factory after refusing to work with the Securitate secret police. While working as a kindergarten teacher, the uncensored manuscript of “Niederungen,” — or “Lowlands” — was smuggled to Germany and published there to instant critical acclaim.

 

          “Niederungen” and other early works depicted life in a small village and the repression faced by its denizens. Her later novels, including “The Land of Green Plums” and “The Appointment,” approach allegory as they graphically portray the brutality suffered by modest people leaving under totalitarianism.

 

          Writing in The New York Times Book Review, Larry Wolff described “The Land of Green Plums” as seeking “to create a sort of poetry out of the spiritual and material ugliness of life in Communist Romania.” And in reviewing “The Appointment” in The New York Times Book Review in 2001, Peter Filkins wrote that Ms. Müller used the thuggery of the government “as a backdrop to the brutality and betrayal with which people treat one another in their everyday lives, be they spouses, family members or the closest of friends.”

 

          Ms. Müller has continued to speak out against oppression and collaboration. In Germany, she has criticized those East German writers who worked with the secret police and recently withdrew from PEN, the human rights organization, to protest its decision to merge with an East German branch.

 

          According to Sara Bertschel, publisher of Metropolitan Books, a unit of Macmillan that released English translations of “The Land of Green Plums” and “The Appointment” in the United States, Ms. Müller has a modest readership in the United States although she has been critically well-received.

 

          The awards ceremony is planned for Dec. 10 in Stockholm. As the winner, Ms. Muller will receive 10 million Swedish kronor, or about $1.4 million.

 

 

 Herta Müller 

     News conference on Thursday in Berlin.

     Ms. Müller is a relative unknown

outside of literary circles in Germany.

Michael Sohn/Associated Press

Herta Müller, 56,

emigrated to Germany

in 1987

from her native Romania

Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

 

 

Nobel Prize

 

 

See This Link For Related Stories

 

http://query.nytimes.com/search/sitesearch?query=Herta+M%FCller+&date_select=full&srchst=cse

 

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herta_M%C3%BCller

 

http://www.dickinson.edu/glossen/heft1/hertabio.html 

 

 

      Herta Müller Kommentare as pdf     

(Click Here)

 

 

 

 

VISITING AUTHOR/EDITOR ARTICLE

OCTOBER 2009

 

     !!!!! A LIFTER-UPPER !!!!!     

 

Forwarded by Magdalena Metzger

 

Never miss an opportunity to make others happy, even if you have to leave them alone in order to do it. 

 ~Author Unknown

 

          This video was made in the  Antwerp , Belgium Central (Train) Station on the 23rd of March 2009..

. . . with no warning to the passengers passing through the station, at 08:00 am. a recording of Julie Andrews singing 'Do, Re, Mi' begins to play on the public address system. 

          As the bemused passengers watch in amazement, some 200 dancers begin to appear from the crowd and station entrances.

          They created this amazing stunt with just two rehearsals!


Enjoy!

 

Click on Image for Movic

(Please notify Webmaster if inoperative)

 

 

 

 

 

VISITING AUTHOR-ARTICLE

OCTOBER 2009

 

AMERICAN AID SOCIETY

AKTIVE SENIOREN

 Von Herbert Heymann

 

Forwarded by American Aid Society, Chicago

 

Ein Senior ist endlich frei,

sein Arbeitsleben ist vorbei.

Er hat die Rentenzeit erreicht,

wohl war es auch nicht immer leicht.

 

Doch untätig will er nicht sein.

Er ist noch fit, schaut locker drein.

Er will nicht nur im Lehnstuhl ruhn,

was Nützliches will er noch tun.

 

Man konnte so, für Groß und Klein,

Ein viel begehrter Heifer sein.

Mit paar Kollegen, denkt er sich,

Das ware richtig handwerkl.ich.

 

Es fanden sich zu diesem Zweck

mit Herzen auf dem rechten Fleck

paar Manner, rüstig, Gott seil Dank,

Maschinen, eine Hobelbank,

 

ein brauchbar großer Werkstattraum

und Werkzeuge, man glaubt es kaum;

auch Holz und Leim, genug und gut.

Nun Frisch ans Werk mit frohem Mut!

 

Es wird palavert diskutiert,

Geschwätzt, gebastelt und probiert,

geplant, entworfen und skizziert,

gepruft, erortert, konstruiert,

 

bedacht, beraten, kreuz und quer,

studiert, verbessert, hin und her,

agiert und kräftig zugepasst,

dann abgemessen, angepasst,

 

gesägt, gebohrt, gefräst, gefeilt,

versucht, geschnitten. und zerteilt,

gezapft, gehobelt und geleimt,

bis alles sich zusammenreimt;

 

auch noch bemalt und fein lackiert,

dann inspiziert und aufpoliert.

Wir lachen über dies und das

und haben allzeit unsren Spaß.

 

Drum werter Kumpel, komm!

Mach mit! In unsrer Gruppe bleibst du fit.

Wir freuen uns auf jede Kraft,

die mit uns feiert, lacht und schafft.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hit Counter

 

Page Author: DSNA webmaster. The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly those of the page author. The contents of this page remain the property of the author/copyright owner. Some pages will be updated on a regular schedule. Suggestions or fixes are welcome but may take weeks to months to be incorporated. Anyone may link freely to anything on this page and print any page for personal use. However, page contents, structure and format, and design elements, cannot be copied or republished without the express written permission of the page author/copyright owner. If you have any questions or suggestions, please email the DSNA webmaster at: tcthornton1@sbcglobal.net .  © Copyright 2012