Bertolt Brecht Journals, 1934-55Bloomsbury Publishing, 14.07.2016 - 576 Seiten "Those who dismiss Brecht as a yea-sayer to Stalinism are advised to read these journals and moderate their opinion." (Paul Bailey, Weekend Telegraph)
"A marvellous, motley collage of political ideas, domestic detail, artistic debate, poems, photographs and cuttings from newspapers and magazines, assembled, undoubtedly for posterity by one of the great writers of the century" (New Statesman and Society) |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 24
... Piscator advised (by Pieck of the Comintern) not to return from France now that MORT had been 'liquidated'. At the end of the year Mikhail Koltsov of Izvestiya, the sponsor of Das Wort, the Moscowbased German Communist magazine which ...
... Piscator, Burian, Tretiakov, Gorelik and Auden. Unhappily names like these were almost as remote from the new Soviet orthodoxy – with its nineteenthcentury art models, its Stanislavskyan theatre, its neoclassical architecture, its ...
... Piscator and Tretiakov in 1935, Brecht's New York visit in the autumn of that year had not been a happy experience. It took place just at the beginning of the Federal Theatre Project, and the formal innovations of the Living Newspaper ...
... Piscator's direction, and the result is a flop. All this is émigré stuff, and aimed to satisfy conventional criteria; there is nothing to match the preHitler didactic plays or the musictheatre works with Weill. Only when Brecht gets ...
... piscator theatre, which i admired no less, moved me to study marxism. perhaps this was due to my scientific education (i had studied medicine for several years), which strongly immunised me against influence from the emotional side ...
Inhalt
24 | |
July 1941 to 5 November 1947 | 40 |
December 1947 to 20 October 1948 | 46 |
October 1948 to 18 July 1955 | 47 |
Editorial Notes | 56 |
Select Bibliography | 57 |