Bertolt Brecht Journals, 1934-55"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 45
... orthodoxy – with its nineteenthcentury art models, its Stanislavskyan theatre, its neoclassical architecture, its romantic or folksy music and its Socialist Realist writing – as from Hitler's showpiece House of German Art in Munich.
... and, in so far as they were reinforced by the locals, these could have changed their political views after 1945 without abandoning Hitler's aesthetic prejudices. As in 1938 'Socialist Realism' was the criterion, and it was not long ...
... damned Eisler's proposed text as 'antinational'; Girnus repeatedly said that it 'infringed the principles of Socialist Realism'; Ernst Hermann Meyer even cited Stalin's arts henchman Zhdanov. Eisler moved back to Vienna, ...
... just as the nazis have debased socialism. the realistic writer in an 'age of decline' (our epoch that is; at the outset a few murmurings of 'age of bourgeois decline', then simply 'age of decline' – the whole thing is coming unstuck ...
he will somehow include it. how this gambit resembles the national 'socialist' manoeuvres, the way these twits launch their formalistic critique with a campaign against formalism ... difficulties in CAESAR. he still has to be worked out ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
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 |