Télécharger A Journey to Nowhere: Among the Lands and History of Courland, by Jean-Paul Kauffmann
Ceci est votre temps absolument trouver plus et ont aussi un comportement particulier. Contrôle comme une activité de loisir de le faire peut être fait que le comportement. Aussi, vous pourriez ne pas avoir la capacité de lire chaque jour, vous possibilité de choisir la lecture d'une publication à aller de pair avec le temps libre est assez bonne. Il ne sont pas tous les gens ont de cette manière. Beaucoup pensent en outre que la lecture sera si monotone.
A Journey to Nowhere: Among the Lands and History of Courland, by Jean-Paul Kauffmann
Télécharger A Journey to Nowhere: Among the Lands and History of Courland, by Jean-Paul Kauffmann
Quand une nouvelle décision vient d'être un nouveau fabricant de vivre mieux, pourquoi regretterais de celui-ci? Quelque chose de vieux devrait être modifié et restauré avec quelque chose de nouveau, si le nouveau point est mieux. Comme l'activité supplémentaire que nous recommandons, si vous avez aucune suggestion d'apprécier votre temps libre, l'analyse pourrait vous aider à perdre du temps judicieusement. Ouais, en passant le temps peut être fait complètement par tout le monde. Cependant, être intelligemment passer le moment est extrêmement rare. Alors, voulez-vous être l'une des personnes sages?
À l'heure actuelle, ce problème est donc très facile à résoudre. Lorsque vous pouvez créer un lien vers le net, vous pouvez découvrir et guider facilement. Lorsque vous avez besoin vraiment le A Journey To Nowhere: Among The Lands And History Of Courland, By Jean-Paul Kauffmann pour être votre produit de lecture plus rapide, vous pouvez visiter cette page et également cliquer sur le lien web que nous avons en fait déjà offert. Guide est prêt à commander. Lorsque dans divers autres temps, vous aurez certainement besoin de beaucoup plus de jours pour obtenir le livre, dans cette rédaction les données que nous doux offre sera fait directement.
Ce A Journey To Nowhere: Among The Lands And History Of Courland, By Jean-Paul Kauffmann est recommandé pour vous de toutes les phases de la vie. Lors de la vérification devient un must, vous pourriez penser qu'il peut faire partie de votre vie. Lorsque vous avez pris en considération le fait que la lecture sera certainement mieux pour votre vie, vous pouvez penser qu'il est non seulement un must mais aussi un passe-temps. Avoir passe-temps pour la lecture est bonne. De cette façon, pourrait vous aider à améliorer constamment vos compétences et la compréhension.
Beaucoup de gens qui permettent d'atteindre le succès et aussi sage ont une grande pratique d'analyse. Aussi leurs produits de lecture sont différents. Lorsque vous êtes assez diligents pour faire l'examen de chaque jour, aussi quelques minutes de votre temps libre, votre réussite et de l'éminence se développera certainement. Les gens qui prennent un coup d'oeil vous pourriez être apprécié exactement ce que vous faites. Il va certainement donner peu de confiance bits pour stimuler. Donc, quand vous avez aucune idée en ce qui concerne exactement ce qu'il faut faire dans votre temps libre actuellement, nous allons inspectent le lien pour obtenir le A Journey To Nowhere: Among The Lands And History Of Courland, By Jean-Paul Kauffmann ainsi que l'examen plus rapide.
Détails sur le produit
Broché: 272 pages
Editeur : MacLehose Press (6 juin 2013)
Langue : Anglais
ISBN-10: 1782062424
ISBN-13: 978-1782062424
Dimensions du produit:
12,7 x 1,9 x 19,7 cm
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Jean -Paul Kauffmann is an Alsatian writer who at a fairly young age developed an interest in Courland. Courland was a once important duchy that forms part of present day Latvia.Circa 1967 he was living in Montreal where he became involved with a young woman named Mara , whose parents were from Courland.The relationship with Mara ended with Kauffamnns return to France but the interest in Courland remained. Courlanders keep popping up in his life and he even finds out that his cousin has a Courland connection.During World War 2 Alsace was incorporated into the Third Reich as a province . This subjected Alsatians to the privilege of being drafted into the German Army.It turns out the cousins father died fighting with the German Army in Courland.An opportunity to go to Latvia arises.Kauffmann is to do a magazine piece on Courland . Finding this out, the cousin asks Kauffmann to contact a man known as the Resurrector when he is in Latvia.The Resurrector is devoted to recovering the remains of German war dead and the cousin wants to know what happened to her father.Kauffmann goes to Latvia and his reaction to the place is a bit strange.He appears to have no interest in Riga, a lively interesting city.His wife wants to look at the art nouveau buildings designed by Sergei Eisensteins father,Kauffmann wants to get to Courland .When he gets there, he doesn't seem all that focused on the present.Instead he keeps superimposing the past on the present.The stay in Courland becomes extended and as it does the book becomes richer and deeper.Kauffmann never meets the the Resurrector, who keeps ducking him but he does acquire a rather strange sidekick , a German called the Professor.The two of them engage in a rather friendly war, which amounts to , who can be the greatest pedant.This is not the book to read if you want a sense of what is happening in post- communist Latvia. It's too personal.That is its strength.The book is a journey into a self , its past and present.I would say its pretty impressionistic.What the book delivers is not so much an encounter with Courland- although you will learn a lot about it - as an encounter with an interesting complex man.
A Journey to Nowhere: Detours and Riddles in the Lands and History of Courland (2009, English version 2012) is a long title for a novel about a place that no longer exists. Kauffmann’s book is part historical essay, part novel, and part travelogue. It is about Courland, a region in the Baltic country Latvia. The Teutonic Knights held control from 1237 and it was part of Latvia and Estonia until 1561 after which time it was an independent duchy until 1795. In 1795 the Duke of Courland ceded the duchy to the Russian Empire. After World War I, Courland became one of four provinces in Latvia that initially gained independence in 1918. Germany occupied it in World War II and Soviet Russia re-conquered it in 1944. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, it became part of independent Latvia.The novel commences in the late 1960s in Montreal, Canada, where Kauffmann, a Frenchman, meets a Courlander, although she had never been there. Thirty years later, working as a journalist in Paris, he meets another Courlander, a direct descendant of Dorothear of Courland, who also had never been there. His editor-in-chief suggested that he travel there to produce an article. With his fascination for French King Louis XVIII, who spent time in exile in Courland, the author packed his bags.In the late 1990s, Kauffmann begins his Courland experience in Liepaja (formerly Libau), a naval port built in 1890 and a Soviet military base until 1994. With closed factories, ruins and deserted farms, it had a “curious feeling of a wasteland†– graffiti shows two hearts joined by a safety pin. Partially sunk shipwrecks lie offshore as a reminder of the Soviet base. Known as “the city where the wind is born†it was also the port where Russian Jews fled from to migrate to New York from 1906-1914.Kauffmann travels to the enclave, Karosta, “isolated by a swivelling bridge … a masterpiece of modern architecture†designed by Gustave Eiffel – of the Eiffel Tower fame. He visits a disused country mansion in Katzdangen, the Sabile vineyard, Moricsala (an island), the village of Pope, the Ventspils castle, Blankenburg and Talsi.It is Mitau that is most fascinating. It reminded Louis XVIII of Versailles, near Paris. Of 23 years in exile from France the French king spent the years 1791-1801 and 1804-1807 in Courland. His chateau, called Jelgava Palace, was Russian Rococo style with “a touch of Versailles … [but] nothing of the Grand Siecle, however.†Bartolomeo Rastrelli, born in Paris of Italian heritage, built the palace in 1700. He also constructed the Winter Palace in St Petersburg, Russia, which houses the Heritage Museum.Kauffmann notes that one of Courland’s famous residents, from the city Dundaga, was Arvids Blumentals, also known as Australia’s Crocodile Dundee, portrayed by Paul Hogan in the movie.Courland, with the Gulf of Riga to the north, the Baltic to the west, and Lithuania to its south, it is now part of Latvia, and therefore no longer exists as a separate country. Kauffmann concludes that Courland “is the land of joyful desolation,†possibly a reference to Buzz Aldrin, the first man to walk on the moon, who described its surface as “magnificent desolation†in 1969. Courland has been “losing its identity since 1945.â€Kauffmann’s style is easy to read, entertaining, and interesting. He has a conversational style, open to commenting on his thoughts and feelings as he researches a place that has obsessed him since the 1960s due to his Courlander lover in Canada. While he never actually falls in love with Courland, he does have a wistful tone to his descriptions and a sincere curiosity for the past and its memories.
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