000 | 02069nam a22001937a 4500 | ||
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_c1924 _d1924 |
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008 | 180822b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a349910170x | ||
041 | _ager | ||
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_aPN1988 _b.D738 2003 |
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100 |
_aWolfgang Borchert _d1947 |
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245 |
_aDraußen vor der Tür _cWolfgang Borchert |
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_aGermany _bRowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH _c2003 |
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300 | _a121 p. | ||
440 | _aSara Lee & Carla Ghanem Collection | ||
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_aFrom book cover:
Das einzige Drama des früh verstobenen Dichters ist ein verzweifelter Protestschrei gegen die zerstörerische und verderbnisträchtige Macht des Krieges. Seine Erzählungen und Prosastücke berichten mit sicher akzentuierter Ausdruckskraft von den verheerenden Kriegsfolgen im einzelnen und im gemeinsamen Menschenleben.
_b From Wikipedia.org: The Man Outside (German: Draußen vor der Tür, literally Outside, at the door) is a play by Wolfgang Borchert, written in a few days in the late autumn of 1946. It made its debut on German radio on 13 February 1947. The Man Outside describes the hopelessness of a post-war soldier called Beckmann who returns from Russia to find that he has lost his wife and his home, as well as his illusions and beliefs. He finds every door he comes to closed. Even the Elbe River rejects his suicide, washing him up on shore. The play ends with what can be assumed to be Beckmann's death. Due to its release during the sensitive immediate postwar period, Borchert subtitled his play "A play that no theatre wants to perform and no audience wants to see." Despite this, the first radio broadcast (February 1947) was very successful. The first theatrical production of The Man Outside (at the Hamburger Kammerspiele) opened on the day after Borchert's death, 21 November 1947. The play consists of five scenes in one act. It makes use of expressionist forms and Brechtian techniques, such as the Verfremdungseffekt (estrangement effect) to disorient and engage its audience. |
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546 | _aGerman text. | ||
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_aWolfgang Borchert _d1947 _eAuthor |
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_2lcc _cBK |