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Lädt ... Ist das ein Mensch? / Die Atempause. (6485 510) (1947)von Primo Levi
Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. The second or third or fourth time I have read it. One of the most important works of the 20th century. Still stunned by how people keep on going, in the face of a bottomless abyss. Exhilarating, inspirational, full of an unfathomable spirit. ( ) It's difficult to say anything about these two books, the first shorter than the second, which were published together being the story of the author's experience in one of the workcamps attached to Auschwitz and the subsequent liberation and tale of how he eventually got back to his home in Italy. Despite the grim subject matter, they contain passages of lyricism, philosophy and the endurance of the human spirit against a regime of the utmost brutality which aimed not only to murder millions, but to pulverise their individuality in the process. The second volume also makes it clear how difficult it was to return home in a situation of total chaos just before the Cold War started, when there was a constant struggle just to find food. The author was more fortunate in most in having living family to go home to when so many had lost theirs (and I know from other books and from TV documentaries, returned to find their homes stolen by people who would not give them up, and even to those who would murder them for being Jews). However, he had no guarantee that he would ever reach them. In the afterword it was sad to hear that he apparently had committed suicide many years later, but I've read online that this is controversial - an article from the Boston Review (https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/diego-gambetta-primo-levi-last-moments/) makes it clear that he could just as easily have had a dizzy spell following a recent operation which resulted in him falling over the low balcony on the staircase in his apartment building. A sad ending in any case for a man who had overcome so much and left a lasting legacy in the shape of this amazing memoir, for which I can only give 5 stars. Wstawać. Why did the last page of Truce shatter me? Years after Levi died, many decades after he survived Auschwitz, I read it and still felt the enormous haunt of what the Nazis did. After what seemed like an entire book that rejected the idea that the Holocaust represented something inherently wicked in human nature -- hundreds of pages celebrating the triumph over Auschwitz, the escape, community and chutzpah and character over the gray decimation of persons -- Levi writes in the last pages of a "truce". A truce -- it is unclear really what it is a truce of -- seemingly between the survivors of the Holocaust and the perpetrators of it, or perhaps the memory of their actions. Quite the reversal. Everything we do as humans is tarnished by the Nazis; we live in a dream that is corrupt in its core, that is drained from its color when you look at it close enough. Esther Perel says that the "erotic is the antidote to death", and perhaps Levi says here that eroticism has been ruined, wasted, invalidated. That there is no redemption. keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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