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Günter Grass

Günter Wilhelm Grass (German: [ˈɡʏntɐ ˈɡʁas] ;[1][2] 16 October 1927 – 13 April 2015) was a German novelist, poet, playwright, illustrator, graphic artist, sculptor, and recipient of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Literature.[3][4][5][6]

Günter Grass
Grass in 2006
BornGünter Wilhelm Graß
(1927-10-16)16 October 1927
Danzig-Langfuhr, Free City of Danzig
Died13 April 2015(2015-04-13) (aged 87)
Lübeck, Germany
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • poet
  • playwright
  • sculptor
  • graphic designer
LanguageGerman
Period1956–2013
Literary movementVergangenheitsbewältigung
Notable works
Notable awards
Spouse
Anna Margareta Schwarz
(m. 1954; div. 1978)
Ute Grunert
(m. 1979)
Signature

He was born in the Free City of Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland). As a teenager, he was drafted into the military and served from late 1944 in the Waffen-SS. He was taken as a prisoner of war by US forces at the end of the war in May 1945. He was released in April 1946. Trained as a stonemason and sculptor, Grass began writing in the 1950s. In his fiction, he frequently returned to the Danzig of his childhood.

Grass is best known for his first novel, The Tin Drum (1959), a key text in European magic realism. It was the first book of his Danzig Trilogy, the other two being Cat and Mouse and Dog Years. His works are frequently considered to have a left-wing political dimension, and Grass was an active supporter of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

The Tin Drum was adapted as a film of the same name, which won both the 1979 Palme d'Or and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. In 1999, the Swedish Academy awarded Grass the Nobel Prize in Literature, praising him as a writer "whose frolicsome black fables portray the forgotten face of history".[7]

Early life edit

Grass was born in the Free City of Danzig on 16 October 1927, to Wilhelm Grass (1899–1979), a Lutheran Protestant of German origin, and Helene Grass (née Knoff, 1898–1954), a Roman Catholic of Kashubian-Polish origin.[8][9] He identified as Kashubian.[10][11][12] Grass was raised a Catholic and served as an altar boy when he was a child.[13] His parents had a grocery store with an attached apartment in Danzig-Langfuhr (now Gdańsk-Wrzeszcz). He had a younger sister, Waltraud, born in 1930.[14]

 
Grass's childhood home in Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland)

Grass attended the Danzig gymnasium Conradinum. In 1943, at age 16, he became a Luftwaffenhelfer (Air Force "helper"). Soon thereafter, he was conscripted into the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Reich Labour Service). In November 1944, shortly after his 17th birthday, Grass volunteered for submarine service with Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine, "to get out of the confinement felt as a teenager in his parents' house", which he considered stuffy Catholic lower middle-class.[15][16]

After the Navy refused him, he was called up for the 10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg in late 1944.[17][18] Grass did not reveal until 2006 that he was drafted into the Waffen-SS at that time.[19] His unit functioned as a regular Panzer Division, and he served with them from February 1945 until he was wounded on 20 April 1945. He was captured in Marienbad (now Mariánské Lázně, Czech Republic) and sent to a US prisoner-of-war camp in Bad Aibling, Bavaria.[20]

From 1946 to 1947, Grass worked in a mine and received training in stonemasonry. He studied sculpture and graphics at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. He also was a co-founder of Group 47, organized by Hans Werner Richter. Grass worked as a writer, graphic designer, and sculptor, traveling frequently.

In 1953 he moved to West Berlin and studied at the Berlin University of the Arts. From 1960, he lived in Berlin as well as part-time in Schleswig-Holstein.[21] In 1961 he publicly objected to the erection of the Berlin Wall.

From 1983 to 1986, he held the presidency of the Academy of Arts, Berlin.[20]

Personal life edit

In 1954 Grass married Anna Margareta Schwarz, a Swiss dancer, which ended in divorce in 1978. He and Schwarz had four children: Franz (born 1957), Raoul (1957), Laura (1961), and Bruno (1965). They separated in 1972, and he began a relationship with Veronika Schröter, with whom he had a daughter, Helene (1974). He also had a daughter, Nele (1979), with Ingrid Kruger.

In 1979 he married Ute Grunert, an organist, to whom he was still married at his death.[20] He had two stepsons from his second marriage, Malte and Hans. He had 18 grandchildren at his death.[20][22]

Grass was a fan of Bundesliga Club SC Freiburg.[23]

Major works edit

Danzig Trilogy edit

 
Danzig Krantor waterfront (postcard, c. 1900)

Grass's best-known work is The Tin Drum (Die Blechtrommel), published in 1959 (and adapted as a film of the same name by director Volker Schlöndorff in 1979). It was followed in 1961 by Cat and Mouse (Katz und Maus), a novella, and in 1963 by the novel Dog Years (Hundejahre).

The books are collectively called the Danzig Trilogy and focus on the rise of Nazism and how World War II affected Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland). It had been separated from Germany after World War I and was designated as the Free City of Danzig (Freie Stadt Danzig).[24]

Dog Years (1965) is considered a sequel of sorts to The Tin Drum, as it features some of the same characters.[25] It portrays the area's mixed ethnicities and complex historical background in lyrical prose that is highly evocative.[26]

The Tin Drum established Grass as one of the leading authors of Germany. It set a high bar of comparison for all of his subsequent works, which critics often compared unfavorably to this early work.[27] In West Germany of the late 1950s and early '60s, the book was controversial. The city of Bremen revoked a prize it bestowed on Grass because of what its leaders considered the "immorality" of his debut novel. [20] When Grass received the Nobel Prize in literature in 1999, the Nobel Committee stated that the publication of The Tin Drum "was as if German literature had been granted a new beginning after decades of linguistic and moral destruction".[28]

The Flounder edit

The 1977 novel The Flounder (Der Butt) is based on the folktale of "The Fisherman and His Wife", and deals with the struggle between the sexes. It has been read as an anti-feminist novel. In the novel the magical flounder of the folk tale represents male triumphalism and the patriarchy. It is caught by a group of 1970s feminists, who put it on trial. The book interrogates male-female relations from the past and the present through the relationship between the narrator and his wife who, like the wife in the folk tale, insatiably craves more.[29] Although the book could be read as a defense of women and a denunciation of male chauvinism, it was largely harshly critiqued and rejected by feminists. They rejected its portrayal of violence, sexualization and objectification, and what they perceived as male narcissism and gender essentialism.[30]

My Century and Crabwalk edit

In My Century (Mein Jahrhundert, 1999) Grass covered many of the 20th-century's brutal historic events, conveyed in short pieces of a few pages by year, forming a mosaic of expression.

In 2002, Grass returned to the forefront of world literature with Crabwalk (Im Krebsgang). This novella, one of whose main characters first appeared in Cat and Mouse, was Grass's most successful work in decades. It dealt with the events of a refugee ship, full of thousands of Germans, being sunk by a Soviet Russian submarine, killing most on board. It was one of a number of works since the late 20th century that have explored the victimization of Germans in World War II.[31]

Memoir trilogy edit

In 2006, Grass published the first volume in a trilogy of autobiographic memoirs. Titled Peeling the Onion (Beim Häuten der Zwiebel), it dealt with his childhood, war years, early efforts as a sculptor and poet, and finally his literary success with the publication of The Tin Drum. In a pre-publication interview, Grass revealed for the first time that he had been a member of the Waffen-SS, and not only served as a Flakhelfer (anti-aircraft assistant), as he had long claimed. On being asked about his decision to make a public confession, he answered: "It was a weight on me, my silence over all these years is one of the reasons I wrote the book. It had to come out in the end."[32]

In response to the interview and the book, many critics accused him of hypocrisy for having hidden this part of his past, while simultaneously being a strong voice for ethics and morality in the public debate.[32] The book was praised for its depictions of the German postwar generation, and the social and moral development of a nation burdened simultaneously by destruction and a deep sense of guilt.[33] Throughout the memoir, Grass plays with the frailty of memory, for which the layers of the onion are a metaphor. Grass second-guesses his own memories, throws his own autobiographical statements into doubt, and questions whether the person inhabiting his past was really him. This struggle with memory comes to represent the struggle of the German people during the same period with Germany's Nazi past.[34]

He published the second volume of the trilogy, The Box (German: Die Box) in 2008; and the third, Grimms Wörter (Grimm's Words), the title referring to the Brothers Grimm's Deutsches Wörterbuch (German Dictionary), in 2010.

Main themes and literary style edit

Grass's work is centered on World War II and its effects on Germany and the German people. He critiques the forms of ideological reasoning that undergirded the Nazi regime. He uses the location of the city of Danzig/Gdańsk and its ambiguous historical status between Germany and Poland to stand as a symbol of the ambiguity between and among ethnic groups. Grass's ancestry includes both German and Slavic family members, some of whom fought on opposite sides of the war. His works also show a sustained concern for the marginal and marginalized subjects, such as Oskar Matzerath, the dwarf in The Tin Drum, whose body was considered an aberration unworthy of life in the Nazi ideology, or the Roma and Sinti people deemed impure and unworthy by the Nazis and subjected to eugenics and genocide, as were the Jews.[35][36]

Grass's literary style combines elements of magic realism with a penchant for questioning. He complicates questions of authorship by intermingling realistic autobiographical elements with unreliable narrators and fantastic events or happenings that create irony or satirize events to form social critiques.[37][38]

Reception by critics and colleagues edit

Grass's work has tended to divide the critics into those who have considered his experiments and style to be sublime and those who have found it to be tied down by his political posturing. American critics, such as John Updike, have found the mixture of politics and social critique in his works to diminish its artistic qualities.[39] In his various critiques of Grass's works, Updike wrote that Grass had been consumed by his "strenuous career as celebrity-author-artist-Socialist" and said about one of his later novels that "he can't be bothered to write a novel; he just sends dispatches ... from the front lines of his engagement". Even if frequently critical of Grass, Updike considered him to be "one of the very, very few authors whose next novel one has no intention of missing".[40]

Grass's literary style has been widely influential. John Irving called Grass "simply the most original and versatile writer alive". According to Mews, critics have noted parallels between Irving's A Prayer for Owen Meany (1989) and The Tin Drum.[41] Similarly, Salman Rushdie has acknowledged a debt to Grass's work, particularly The Tin Drum; in addition, Mews has said parallels to Grass's work have been pointed out in Rushdie's own oeuvre.[42]

Social and political activism edit

 
Grass in 1986

Grass was for several decades a supporter of the Social Democratic Party of Germany and its policies. He took part in German and international political debate on several occasions. During Willy Brandt's chancellorship, Grass was an active supporter. Grass criticized left-wing radicals and instead argued in favor of the "snail's pace", as he put it, of democratic reform (Aus dem Tagebuch einer Schnecke, literally "from the diary of a snail"). Books containing his speeches and essays have been published throughout his literary career.[20]

In the 1980s, Grass became active in the peace movement and visited Calcutta for six months.[20] A diary with drawings was published as Zunge zeigen, an allusion to Kali's tongue.

During the events leading up to the reunification of Germany in 1989–90, Grass argued for the continued separation of the two German states. He asserted that a unified Germany would be likely to resume its role as belligerent nation-state. This argument estranged many Germans, who came to see him as too much of a moralizing figure.[32]

In 2001, Grass proposed the creation of a German-Polish museum for art lost to other countries during the War. The Hague Convention of 1907 requires the return of art that had been evacuated, stolen or seized. Some countries refused to repatriate some of the looted art.[43][44]

On 4 April 2012, Grass's poem "What Must Be Said" (Was gesagt werden muss) was published in several European newspapers. Grass expressed his concern about the hypocrisy of German military support (the delivery of a submarine) of Israel, which might use such equipment to launch nuclear warheads against Iran, which "could wipe out the Iranian people". And he hoped that many would demand "that the governments of both Iran and Israel allow an international authority free and open inspection of the nuclear potential and capability of both." In response, Israel declared him persona non grata in that country.[45][46][47]

According to Avi Primor, president of the Israel Council on Foreign Relations, Grass was the only important German cultural figure who had refused to meet with him when he served as Israeli ambassador to Germany. Primor noted: "One explanation for [Grass']s strange behavior might be found in the fact that Grass (who despite his poem is probably not the bitter enemy of Israel that one would imagine) had certain personal difficulties with Israel that were not necessarily of his own making." Primor said that during Grass's earlier visit to Israel, he

"was confronted with the anger of an Israeli public that booed him in successive public appearances. To be sure, the Israeli protestors were not targeting Grass personally and their anger had nothing at all to do with his literature. It was the German effort to establish cultural relations with Israel to which they objected. Grass, however, did not see it that way and may well have felt personally slighted."[48]

Grass supported the Campaign for the Establishment of a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, an organization that campaigns for democratic reform of the United Nations, and the creation of a more accountable international political system.[49]

On 26 April 2012, Grass wrote a poem criticizing European policy in the treatment of Greece in the European debt crisis. In "Europe's Disgrace", Grass accuses Europe of condemning Greece to poverty, a country "whose mind conceived Europe".[50][51]

Just a few days before he died, Grass completed his last book, Vonne Endlichkait. The title is in East Prussian dialect, the native dialect of Grass, and means "About Finitude". According to his publisher Gerhard Steidl, the book was "a literary experiment", combining short prose texts, poems, and pencil drawings by the writer.[52] The book was published in August 2015.

Awards and honours edit

 
Grass with the West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, 1972

Grass received dozens of international awards; in 1999, he was awarded the highest literary honour: the Nobel Prize in Literature. The Swedish Academy noted him as a writer "whose frolicsome black fables portray the forgotten face of history".[7] His literature is commonly categorized as part of the German artistic movement known as Vergangenheitsbewältigung, roughly translated as "coming to terms with the past."

In 1965, Grass received the Georg Büchner Prize;[53] in 1993 he was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature[54] In 1995, he received the Hermann Kesten Prize.

Representatives of the city of Bremen joined to establish the Günter Grass Foundation with the aim of establishing a centralized collection of his numerous works, especially his many personal readings, videos and films. The Günter Grass House in Lübeck houses exhibitions of his drawings and sculptures, and an archive and a library.[55]

In 1992, he received the Hidalgo Prize, awarded by the National Association of Spain "Presencia Gitana", in recognition of his defense of the Romani People.[56]

In 2012, Grass received the European of the Year award from the European Movement Denmark (Europabevægelsen), honoring his political debates in European affairs.[57]

Waffen-SS revelations edit

 
Grass' prisoner of war record, indicating Waffen-SS membership

In August 2006, in an interview about his forthcoming book, Peeling the Onion, Grass said that he had been a member of the Waffen-SS in World War II.[19] Before that, he was thought to have been a typical member of the "Flakhelfer generation", one of those too young to see much fighting or to be involved with the Nazi regime beyond its youth organizations.[58] On 15 August 2006, Spiegel Online published three 1946 documents from US forces verifying Grass's Waffen-SS membership.[59]

After an unsuccessful attempt to volunteer for the U-boat fleet in 1942, at age 15, Grass had been conscripted into the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Reich Labor Service). He was called up for the Waffen-SS in 1944. Grass was trained as a tank gunner and fought with the 10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg until its surrender to US forces at Marienbad.[60][61]

In 2007, Grass published an account of his wartime experience in The New Yorker, including an attempt to "string together the circumstances that probably triggered and nourished [his] decision to enlist."[61] To the BBC, Grass said in 2006: "It happened as it did to many of my age. We were in the labour service and all at once, a year later, the call-up notice lay on the table. And only when I got to Dresden did I learn it was the Waffen-SS."[62]

As Grass was for many decades an outspoken left-leaning critic of Germany's failure to deal with its Nazi past, his statement caused a great stir in the press. Rolf Hochhuth said it was "disgusting" that this same "politically correct" Grass had publicly criticized Helmut Kohl and Ronald Reagan's visit to a military cemetery at Bitburg in 1985, because it contained graves of Waffen-SS soldiers.[32] In the same vein, historian Michael Wolffsohn accused Grass of hypocrisy in not earlier disclosing his SS membership.[63] Joachim Fest, a biographer of Adolf Hitler, remarked on Grass's disclosure:

"After 60 years, this confession comes a bit too late. I can't understand how someone who for decades set himself up as a moral authority, a rather smug one, could pull this off."[64]

Others defended Grass, saying his involuntary Waffen-SS service came very early in his life, resulting from his being drafted shortly after his seventeenth birthday. They noted he had always—after the war was lost—been publicly critical of Germany's Nazi past. For example, novelist John Irving criticized those who would dismiss the achievements of a lifetime because of a mistake made as a teenager.[65]

Grass's biographer Michael Jürgs [de] described the controversy as resulting in "the end of a moral institution".[66] Lech Wałęsa initially criticized Grass for keeping silent about his Waffen-SS membership for 60 years. He later withdrew his criticism after reading Grass's letter to the mayor of Gdańsk, saying that Grass "set the good example for the others."[67] On 14 August 2006, the ruling party of Poland, Law and Justice, called on Grass to relinquish his honorary citizenship of Gdańsk. Jacek Kurski, a Law and Justice politician, said, "It is unacceptable for a city where the first blood was shed, where World War II began, to have a Waffen-SS member as an honorary citizen."[68] But, according to a 2010 poll[69][70] ordered by city's authorities, the vast majority of Gdańsk citizens did not support Kurski's position. The mayor of Gdańsk, Paweł Adamowicz, said that he opposed submitting the affair to the municipal council because it was not for the council to judge history.[71]

Death edit

 
Grass's grave in Behlendorf

An avid pipe smoker for most of his adult life, Grass died at the age of 87 of a lung infection on 13 April 2015 in a Lübeck hospital.[72][73][74] He was buried in a private family observance on 29 April in Behlendorf, 15 miles south of Lübeck, where he had lived since 1995.

American novelist John Irving delivered the main eulogy at a memorial service for Grass on 10 May in the Theater Lübeck. Among those who attended were German President Joachim Gauck, former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, federal Commissioner for Culture Monika Grütters, film director Volker Schlöndorff, and Paweł Adamowicz, mayor of Gdańsk.[75][76] Grütters, in remarks to mourners, noted that, through his work, Grass championed the independence of artists and of art itself.[77] Adamowicz said Grass had "bridged the chasm between Germany and Poland", and praised the novelist's "unwillingness to compromise".[78]

Bibliography edit

  • Die Vorzüge der Windhühner (poems, 1956); Steidl, 2007, ISBN 978-3-86521-569-7
  • Die bösen Köche. Ein Drama (play, 1956) ISSN 0722-8511 translated as The Wicked Cooks in Four Plays (1967)
  • Hochwasser. Ein Stück in zwei Akten (play, 1957) The Flood
  • Onkel, Onkel. Ein Spiel in vier Akten (play, 1958) Mister, Mister
  • Danziger Trilogie
  • Gleisdreieck (poems, 1960)
  • Die Plebejer proben den Aufstand (play, 1966) trans. The Plebeians Rehearse the Uprising (1966)
  • Ausgefragt (poems, 1967)
  • Über das Selbstverständliche. Reden – Aufsätze – Offene Briefe – Kommentare (speeches, essays, 1968) trans. Speak out! Speeches, Open Letters, Commentaries (1969) with 3 additional pieces
  • Örtlich betäubt (novel, 1969) trans. Local Anaesthetic (1970) ISBN 978-0-449-24257-5
  • Davor (play, 1970) trans. Max (1972) on a plot from Local Anaesthetic
  • Aus dem Tagebuch einer Schnecke [de] (political reportage, 1972) trans. From the Diary of a Snail (1973) ISBN 978-0-7493-9455-4
  • Der Bürger und seine Stimme. Reden Aufsätze Kommentare (speeches, essays, 1974)
  • Denkzettel. Politische Reden und Aufsätze 1965–1976 (political essays and speeches, 1978)
  • Der Butt (novel, 1977) trans. The Flounder (1978) ISBN 978-0-15-631935-5
  • Das Treffen in Telgte (novel, 1979) trans. The Meeting at Telgte (1981)
  • Kopfgeburten oder Die Deutschen sterben aus (novel, 1980) trans. Headbirths, or, the Germans are Dying Out (1982)
  • Widerstand lernen. Politische Gegenreden 1980–1983 (political speeches, 1984)
  • Die Rättin (novel, 1986) trans. The Rat (1987) ISBN 978-0-15-675830-7
  • Zunge zeigen. Ein Tagebuch in Zeichnungen (political diary, 1988) trans. Show Your Tongue (1989)
  • Unkenrufe (novel, 1992) trans. The Call of the Toad (1992) ISBN 978-0-15-615340-9
  • Ein weites Feld [de] (novel, 1995) trans. Too Far Afield (2000) ISBN 978-0-15-601416-8
  • Mein Jahrhundert (novel, 1999) trans. My Century (1999) ISBN 978-0-15-601141-9
  • Im Krebsgang (novel, 2002) trans. Crabwalk (2002) ISBN 978-0-15-602970-4
  • Letzte Tänze (poems, 2003)
  • Beim Häuten der Zwiebel (memoir, 2006) trans. Peeling the Onion (2007) ISBN 978-0-15-603534-7 – first volume of memoir
  • Dummer August (poems, 2007)
  • Die Box (memoir, 2008) trans. The Box (2010) ISBN 978-0-09-953975-9 – second volume of memoir
  • Unterwegs von Deutschland nach Deutschland. Tagebuch 1990. (political diary, 2009) trans. From Germany to Germany: Diary 1990 (2012) ISBN 978-0-547-36460-5
  • Grimms Wörter (memoir, 2010) Third volume of memoir.[79]
  • Vonne Endlichkait (collection of prose, poetry, and drawings, 2015) ISBN 978-3-95829-042-6

Collections in English translation

  • Four Plays (1967) including Ten Minutes to Buffalo
  • In the Egg and Other Poems (1977)
  • Two States One Nation? (1990)[79]
  • Of All That Ends (poetry and prose) (6 December 2016) ISBN 978-0-544-78538-0

Reviews edit

  • Murdoch, Brian (1982), Sisyphean Labours, which includes a review of Headbirths, or, The Germans are Dying Out, in Cencrastus No. 9, Summer 1982, p. 46, ISSN 0264-0856

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Woods, Tim (2008). "Grass, Günter". Who's Who of Twentieth Century Novelists. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-70990-8.
  2. ^ "Zunge heraus". Der Spiegel. 4 September 1963. (...) wurde Günter Wilhelm Graß am 16. Oktober 1927 geboren.
  3. ^ Kulish, Nicholas; Bronner, Ethan (8 April 2012). . The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 10 April 2012. Retrieved 8 April 2012. Gunter Grass, Germany's most famous living writer, has tried to quell the growing controversy...
  4. ^ "Outrage in Germany". Der Spiegel. 4 April 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2012. Günter Grass, Germany's most famous living author and the 1999 recipient of the Nobel Prize in literature...
  5. ^ "Yishai: Günter Grass not welcome in Israel". The Jerusalem Post. 4 April 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2012. Germany's most famous living writer, the Nobel literature laureate Günter Grass...
  6. ^ Harding, Luke; Sherwood, Harriet (8 April 2012). "Outcry as Gunter Grass poem strongly criticises Israel". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Retrieved 8 April 2012. During his long literary career, Gunter Grass has been many things. Author, playwright, sculptor and, unquestionably, Germany's most famous living writer. There is the 1999 Nobel Prize and Mr. Grass's broader post-war role as the country's moral conscience...
  7. ^ a b "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1999". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  8. ^ Garland, The Oxford Companion to German Literature, p. 302.
  9. ^ "The Literary Encyclopedia", Günter Grass (b. 1927). Retrieved on 16 August 2006.
  10. ^ "Günter Grass nie żyje. Noblista miał 87 lat". Gazeta Wyborcza. 13 April 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2014. Pytany o tożsamość narodową, mówił, że jest Kaszubą. (Asking about his ethnicity, he always said that he's Kashubian)
  11. ^ . Focus. 13 April 2015. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2014. Aber wenige haben auch soviel einstecken müssen wie der Kaschube aus Danzig. But, just few people had to take flak like the mustachioed Kashubian from Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland)
  12. ^ Klšppel, Klaus; Matthei, Olaf (2011). "Polnische Ostseeküste, Danzig, Masuren". Klaus Klöppel, Olaf Matthei. ISBN 978-3-8297-1258-3. Er bezeichnet sich selbst gerne als Kaschube
  13. ^ "Wer ist Günter Grass?". Der Tagesspiegel. 14 August 2006.
  14. ^ Mayer, Claudia (2002). Günter Grass. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag. p. 16.
  15. ^ "Katholischen Mief"."Und Grass wundert sich: Die öffentliche Selbstrechtfertigung des großen Schriftstellers ist so unnötig wie ärgerlich". Die Zeit. 2006.
  16. ^ . Reuters. 11 August 2006. Archived from the original on 25 August 2006. Retrieved 11 August 2006.
  17. ^ "Autor Günter Grass: "Ich war Mitglied der Waffen-SS"". Der Spiegel. 11 August 2006. Retrieved 11 August 2006.
  18. ^ "Günter Grass was in the Waffen SS" – Survey of reactions to disclosure of time in the Waffen-SS from the German and international press
  19. ^ a b . Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Archived from the original on 8 August 2009. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g Taberner, S., ed. (2009). The Cambridge Companion to Günter Grass. Cambridge University Presses. pp. xiv–xviii.
  21. ^ Hammelehle, Sebastian (13 April 2015). "After many years spent living in Berlin's Friedenau district and a sojourn in the Algarve, Portugal, Grass settled in Behlendorf in Schleswig-Holstein". Der Spiegel. Hamburg. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  22. ^ Donahue, Patrick (13 April 2005). "Guenter Grass, German Writer Who Took On Nazism, Dies at 87". Bloomberg. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  23. ^ "Nobelpreisträger drückt dem SC Freiburg die Daumen". RP Online. 20 February 2000. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  24. ^ International Law Reports (1948) by Elihu Lauterpacht, p. 207
  25. ^ The Thomas Mann Handbook (2013) by Emily Smith, page 168
  26. ^ . DC Books. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  27. ^ Mews 2008, passim.
  28. ^ Mews 2008, p. 1.
  29. ^ O'Neill, Patrick (2009). "The Exploratory Fiction of Günter Grass". In Taberner, S. (Ed.). (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Günter Grass. Cambridge University Press.
  30. ^ Finch, Helen (2009). "Günter Grass and Gender". In Taberner, S. (Ed.). (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Günter Grass. Cambridge University Press.
  31. ^ Krimmer, E. (2008). "'Ein Volk von Opfern?' Germans as Victims in Günter Grass's Die Blechtrommel and Im Krebsgang". Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies. University of Toronto Press. 44 (2): 272–290.
  32. ^ a b c d Stephen Kinzer (13 April 2015). "Günter Grass, German Novelist and Social Critic, Dies at 87". The New York Times.
  33. ^ Izvor Moralic (1 October 2006). . Viennareview.net. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  34. ^ Tim Gardan (23 June 2007). Confessions of a super Grass. Peeled, it renews itself; chopped, it brings tears; only during peeling does it speak the truth. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  35. ^ Arnds, P. O. (2004). Representation, subversion, and eugenics in Günter Grass's The Tin Drum. Camden House.
  36. ^ Taberner, S. (Ed.)., ed. (2009). The Cambridge Companion to Günter Grass. Cambridge University Press.
  37. ^ Braun, R. (2008). Constructing Authorship in the Work of Günter Grass. Oxford University Press.
  38. ^ Arnds, P. O. (2009). "Günter Grass and Magical Realism". In Taberner, S. (Ed.). (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Günter Grass. Cambridge University Press.
  39. ^ Mews 2008, p. [page needed].
  40. ^ Mews 2008, pp. 107, 146, 195.
  41. ^ Mews 2008, p. 53.
  42. ^ Mews 2008, p. 55.
  43. ^ . Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. 26 October 2010. Archived from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
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  45. ^ Bar-Zohar, Ophir; Ravid, Barak (8 April 2012). "Interior Minister declares Gunter Grass persona non grata in Israel". Haaretz. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  46. ^ Günter Grass (5 April 2012). "What Must Be Said". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
  47. ^ Weinthal, Benjamin (3 January 2013). "Benjamin Weinthal: Berlin politicians split over Grass travel ban". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
  48. ^ Avi Primor, "Peeling Günter Grass' Israeli Onion", Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs, Vol. 6, No. 2 (2012), p. 103 (PDF) 25 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ "Overview". Campaign for a UN Parliamentary Assembly. Retrieved 26 September 2017.
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  74. ^ Richard Lea (13 April 2015). "Günter Grass, Nobel-winning German novelist, dies aged 87". The Guardian.
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  76. ^ "Trauerfeier für Günter Grass: Manchmal liebte er uns stärker als wir selbst" by Hubert Spiegel, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 10 May 2015 (in German)
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Sources

  • Mews, Siegfried (2008). Günter Grass and His Critics: From The Tin Drum to Crabwalk. Studies in German Literature. Rochester, New York: Camden House. ISBN 978-1-57113-062-4. OCLC 181424200.

External links edit

Awards and achievements
Preceded by European of the Year
(by the Danish European Movement)

2012
Succeeded by

günter, grass, günter, wilhelm, grass, german, ˈɡʏntɐ, ˈɡʁas, october, 1927, april, 2015, german, novelist, poet, playwright, illustrator, graphic, artist, sculptor, recipient, 1999, nobel, prize, literature, grass, 2006borngünter, wilhelm, graß, 1927, october. Gunter Wilhelm Grass German ˈɡʏntɐ ˈɡʁas 1 2 16 October 1927 13 April 2015 was a German novelist poet playwright illustrator graphic artist sculptor and recipient of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Literature 3 4 5 6 Gunter GrassGrass in 2006BornGunter Wilhelm Grass 1927 10 16 16 October 1927Danzig Langfuhr Free City of DanzigDied13 April 2015 2015 04 13 aged 87 Lubeck GermanyOccupationNovelist poet playwright sculptor graphic designerLanguageGermanPeriod1956 2013Literary movementVergangenheitsbewaltigungNotable worksThe Tin Drum 1959 Cat and Mouse 1961 Dog Years 1963 Crabwalk 2002 Notable awardsGeorg Buchner Prize 1965 Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature 1993 Nobel Prize in Literature 1999 Prince of Asturias Award for Literature 1999SpouseAnna Margareta Schwarz m 1954 div 1978 wbr Ute Grunert m 1979 wbr SignatureHe was born in the Free City of Danzig now Gdansk Poland As a teenager he was drafted into the military and served from late 1944 in the Waffen SS He was taken as a prisoner of war by US forces at the end of the war in May 1945 He was released in April 1946 Trained as a stonemason and sculptor Grass began writing in the 1950s In his fiction he frequently returned to the Danzig of his childhood Grass is best known for his first novel The Tin Drum 1959 a key text in European magic realism It was the first book of his Danzig Trilogy the other two being Cat and Mouse and Dog Years His works are frequently considered to have a left wing political dimension and Grass was an active supporter of the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD The Tin Drum was adapted as a film of the same name which won both the 1979 Palme d Or and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film In 1999 the Swedish Academy awarded Grass the Nobel Prize in Literature praising him as a writer whose frolicsome black fables portray the forgotten face of history 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life 3 Major works 3 1 Danzig Trilogy 3 2 The Flounder 3 3 My Century and Crabwalk 3 4 Memoir trilogy 4 Main themes and literary style 5 Reception by critics and colleagues 6 Social and political activism 7 Awards and honours 8 Waffen SS revelations 9 Death 10 Bibliography 11 Reviews 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksEarly life editGrass was born in the Free City of Danzig on 16 October 1927 to Wilhelm Grass 1899 1979 a Lutheran Protestant of German origin and Helene Grass nee Knoff 1898 1954 a Roman Catholic of Kashubian Polish origin 8 9 He identified as Kashubian 10 11 12 Grass was raised a Catholic and served as an altar boy when he was a child 13 His parents had a grocery store with an attached apartment in Danzig Langfuhr now Gdansk Wrzeszcz He had a younger sister Waltraud born in 1930 14 nbsp Grass s childhood home in Danzig now Gdansk Poland Grass attended the Danzig gymnasium Conradinum In 1943 at age 16 he became a Luftwaffenhelfer Air Force helper Soon thereafter he was conscripted into the Reichsarbeitsdienst Reich Labour Service In November 1944 shortly after his 17th birthday Grass volunteered for submarine service with Nazi Germany s Kriegsmarine to get out of the confinement felt as a teenager in his parents house which he considered stuffy Catholic lower middle class 15 16 After the Navy refused him he was called up for the 10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg in late 1944 17 18 Grass did not reveal until 2006 that he was drafted into the Waffen SS at that time 19 His unit functioned as a regular Panzer Division and he served with them from February 1945 until he was wounded on 20 April 1945 He was captured in Marienbad now Marianske Lazne Czech Republic and sent to a US prisoner of war camp in Bad Aibling Bavaria 20 From 1946 to 1947 Grass worked in a mine and received training in stonemasonry He studied sculpture and graphics at the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf He also was a co founder of Group 47 organized by Hans Werner Richter Grass worked as a writer graphic designer and sculptor traveling frequently In 1953 he moved to West Berlin and studied at the Berlin University of the Arts From 1960 he lived in Berlin as well as part time in Schleswig Holstein 21 In 1961 he publicly objected to the erection of the Berlin Wall From 1983 to 1986 he held the presidency of the Academy of Arts Berlin 20 Personal life editIn 1954 Grass married Anna Margareta Schwarz a Swiss dancer which ended in divorce in 1978 He and Schwarz had four children Franz born 1957 Raoul 1957 Laura 1961 and Bruno 1965 They separated in 1972 and he began a relationship with Veronika Schroter with whom he had a daughter Helene 1974 He also had a daughter Nele 1979 with Ingrid Kruger In 1979 he married Ute Grunert an organist to whom he was still married at his death 20 He had two stepsons from his second marriage Malte and Hans He had 18 grandchildren at his death 20 22 Grass was a fan of Bundesliga Club SC Freiburg 23 Major works editDanzig Trilogy edit Main article Danzig Trilogy nbsp Danzig Krantor waterfront postcard c 1900 Grass s best known work is The Tin Drum Die Blechtrommel published in 1959 and adapted as a film of the same name by director Volker Schlondorff in 1979 It was followed in 1961 by Cat and Mouse Katz und Maus a novella and in 1963 by the novel Dog Years Hundejahre The books are collectively called the Danzig Trilogy and focus on the rise of Nazism and how World War II affected Danzig now Gdansk Poland It had been separated from Germany after World War I and was designated as the Free City of Danzig Freie Stadt Danzig 24 Dog Years 1965 is considered a sequel of sorts to The Tin Drum as it features some of the same characters 25 It portrays the area s mixed ethnicities and complex historical background in lyrical prose that is highly evocative 26 The Tin Drum established Grass as one of the leading authors of Germany It set a high bar of comparison for all of his subsequent works which critics often compared unfavorably to this early work 27 In West Germany of the late 1950s and early 60s the book was controversial The city of Bremen revoked a prize it bestowed on Grass because of what its leaders considered the immorality of his debut novel 20 When Grass received the Nobel Prize in literature in 1999 the Nobel Committee stated that the publication of The Tin Drum was as if German literature had been granted a new beginning after decades of linguistic and moral destruction 28 The Flounder edit The 1977 novel The Flounder Der Butt is based on the folktale of The Fisherman and His Wife and deals with the struggle between the sexes It has been read as an anti feminist novel In the novel the magical flounder of the folk tale represents male triumphalism and the patriarchy It is caught by a group of 1970s feminists who put it on trial The book interrogates male female relations from the past and the present through the relationship between the narrator and his wife who like the wife in the folk tale insatiably craves more 29 Although the book could be read as a defense of women and a denunciation of male chauvinism it was largely harshly critiqued and rejected by feminists They rejected its portrayal of violence sexualization and objectification and what they perceived as male narcissism and gender essentialism 30 My Century and Crabwalk edit In My Century Mein Jahrhundert 1999 Grass covered many of the 20th century s brutal historic events conveyed in short pieces of a few pages by year forming a mosaic of expression In 2002 Grass returned to the forefront of world literature with Crabwalk Im Krebsgang This novella one of whose main characters first appeared in Cat and Mouse was Grass s most successful work in decades It dealt with the events of a refugee ship full of thousands of Germans being sunk by a Soviet Russian submarine killing most on board It was one of a number of works since the late 20th century that have explored the victimization of Germans in World War II 31 Memoir trilogy edit In 2006 Grass published the first volume in a trilogy of autobiographic memoirs Titled Peeling the Onion Beim Hauten der Zwiebel it dealt with his childhood war years early efforts as a sculptor and poet and finally his literary success with the publication of The Tin Drum In a pre publication interview Grass revealed for the first time that he had been a member of the Waffen SS and not only served as a Flakhelfer anti aircraft assistant as he had long claimed On being asked about his decision to make a public confession he answered It was a weight on me my silence over all these years is one of the reasons I wrote the book It had to come out in the end 32 In response to the interview and the book many critics accused him of hypocrisy for having hidden this part of his past while simultaneously being a strong voice for ethics and morality in the public debate 32 The book was praised for its depictions of the German postwar generation and the social and moral development of a nation burdened simultaneously by destruction and a deep sense of guilt 33 Throughout the memoir Grass plays with the frailty of memory for which the layers of the onion are a metaphor Grass second guesses his own memories throws his own autobiographical statements into doubt and questions whether the person inhabiting his past was really him This struggle with memory comes to represent the struggle of the German people during the same period with Germany s Nazi past 34 He published the second volume of the trilogy The Box German Die Box in 2008 and the third Grimms Worter Grimm s Words the title referring to the Brothers Grimm s Deutsches Worterbuch German Dictionary in 2010 Main themes and literary style editGrass s work is centered on World War II and its effects on Germany and the German people He critiques the forms of ideological reasoning that undergirded the Nazi regime He uses the location of the city of Danzig Gdansk and its ambiguous historical status between Germany and Poland to stand as a symbol of the ambiguity between and among ethnic groups Grass s ancestry includes both German and Slavic family members some of whom fought on opposite sides of the war His works also show a sustained concern for the marginal and marginalized subjects such as Oskar Matzerath the dwarf in The Tin Drum whose body was considered an aberration unworthy of life in the Nazi ideology or the Roma and Sinti people deemed impure and unworthy by the Nazis and subjected to eugenics and genocide as were the Jews 35 36 Grass s literary style combines elements of magic realism with a penchant for questioning He complicates questions of authorship by intermingling realistic autobiographical elements with unreliable narrators and fantastic events or happenings that create irony or satirize events to form social critiques 37 38 Reception by critics and colleagues editGrass s work has tended to divide the critics into those who have considered his experiments and style to be sublime and those who have found it to be tied down by his political posturing American critics such as John Updike have found the mixture of politics and social critique in his works to diminish its artistic qualities 39 In his various critiques of Grass s works Updike wrote that Grass had been consumed by his strenuous career as celebrity author artist Socialist and said about one of his later novels that he can t be bothered to write a novel he just sends dispatches from the front lines of his engagement Even if frequently critical of Grass Updike considered him to be one of the very very few authors whose next novel one has no intention of missing 40 Grass s literary style has been widely influential John Irving called Grass simply the most original and versatile writer alive According to Mews critics have noted parallels between Irving s A Prayer for Owen Meany 1989 and The Tin Drum 41 Similarly Salman Rushdie has acknowledged a debt to Grass s work particularly The Tin Drum in addition Mews has said parallels to Grass s work have been pointed out in Rushdie s own oeuvre 42 Social and political activism edit nbsp Grass in 1986Grass was for several decades a supporter of the Social Democratic Party of Germany and its policies He took part in German and international political debate on several occasions During Willy Brandt s chancellorship Grass was an active supporter Grass criticized left wing radicals and instead argued in favor of the snail s pace as he put it of democratic reform Aus dem Tagebuch einer Schnecke literally from the diary of a snail Books containing his speeches and essays have been published throughout his literary career 20 In the 1980s Grass became active in the peace movement and visited Calcutta for six months 20 A diary with drawings was published as Zunge zeigen an allusion to Kali s tongue During the events leading up to the reunification of Germany in 1989 90 Grass argued for the continued separation of the two German states He asserted that a unified Germany would be likely to resume its role as belligerent nation state This argument estranged many Germans who came to see him as too much of a moralizing figure 32 In 2001 Grass proposed the creation of a German Polish museum for art lost to other countries during the War The Hague Convention of 1907 requires the return of art that had been evacuated stolen or seized Some countries refused to repatriate some of the looted art 43 44 On 4 April 2012 Grass s poem What Must Be Said Was gesagt werden muss was published in several European newspapers Grass expressed his concern about the hypocrisy of German military support the delivery of a submarine of Israel which might use such equipment to launch nuclear warheads against Iran which could wipe out the Iranian people And he hoped that many would demand that the governments of both Iran and Israel allow an international authority free and open inspection of the nuclear potential and capability of both In response Israel declared him persona non grata in that country 45 46 47 According to Avi Primor president of the Israel Council on Foreign Relations Grass was the only important German cultural figure who had refused to meet with him when he served as Israeli ambassador to Germany Primor noted One explanation for Grass s strange behavior might be found in the fact that Grass who despite his poem is probably not the bitter enemy of Israel that one would imagine had certain personal difficulties with Israel that were not necessarily of his own making Primor said that during Grass s earlier visit to Israel he was confronted with the anger of an Israeli public that booed him in successive public appearances To be sure the Israeli protestors were not targeting Grass personally and their anger had nothing at all to do with his literature It was the German effort to establish cultural relations with Israel to which they objected Grass however did not see it that way and may well have felt personally slighted 48 Grass supported the Campaign for the Establishment of a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly an organization that campaigns for democratic reform of the United Nations and the creation of a more accountable international political system 49 On 26 April 2012 Grass wrote a poem criticizing European policy in the treatment of Greece in the European debt crisis In Europe s Disgrace Grass accuses Europe of condemning Greece to poverty a country whose mind conceived Europe 50 51 Just a few days before he died Grass completed his last book Vonne Endlichkait The title is in East Prussian dialect the native dialect of Grass and means About Finitude According to his publisher Gerhard Steidl the book was a literary experiment combining short prose texts poems and pencil drawings by the writer 52 The book was published in August 2015 Awards and honours edit nbsp Grass with the West German Chancellor Willy Brandt 1972Grass received dozens of international awards in 1999 he was awarded the highest literary honour the Nobel Prize in Literature The Swedish Academy noted him as a writer whose frolicsome black fables portray the forgotten face of history 7 His literature is commonly categorized as part of the German artistic movement known as Vergangenheitsbewaltigung roughly translated as coming to terms with the past In 1965 Grass received the Georg Buchner Prize 53 in 1993 he was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature 54 In 1995 he received the Hermann Kesten Prize Representatives of the city of Bremen joined to establish the Gunter Grass Foundation with the aim of establishing a centralized collection of his numerous works especially his many personal readings videos and films The Gunter Grass House in Lubeck houses exhibitions of his drawings and sculptures and an archive and a library 55 In 1992 he received the Hidalgo Prize awarded by the National Association of Spain Presencia Gitana in recognition of his defense of the Romani People 56 In 2012 Grass received the European of the Year award from the European Movement Denmark Europabevaegelsen honoring his political debates in European affairs 57 Waffen SS revelations edit nbsp Grass prisoner of war record indicating Waffen SS membershipIn August 2006 in an interview about his forthcoming book Peeling the Onion Grass said that he had been a member of the Waffen SS in World War II 19 Before that he was thought to have been a typical member of the Flakhelfer generation one of those too young to see much fighting or to be involved with the Nazi regime beyond its youth organizations 58 On 15 August 2006 Spiegel Online published three 1946 documents from US forces verifying Grass s Waffen SS membership 59 After an unsuccessful attempt to volunteer for the U boat fleet in 1942 at age 15 Grass had been conscripted into the Reichsarbeitsdienst Reich Labor Service He was called up for the Waffen SS in 1944 Grass was trained as a tank gunner and fought with the 10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg until its surrender to US forces at Marienbad 60 61 In 2007 Grass published an account of his wartime experience in The New Yorker including an attempt to string together the circumstances that probably triggered and nourished his decision to enlist 61 To the BBC Grass said in 2006 It happened as it did to many of my age We were in the labour service and all at once a year later the call up notice lay on the table And only when I got to Dresden did I learn it was the Waffen SS 62 As Grass was for many decades an outspoken left leaning critic of Germany s failure to deal with its Nazi past his statement caused a great stir in the press Rolf Hochhuth said it was disgusting that this same politically correct Grass had publicly criticized Helmut Kohl and Ronald Reagan s visit to a military cemetery at Bitburg in 1985 because it contained graves of Waffen SS soldiers 32 In the same vein historian Michael Wolffsohn accused Grass of hypocrisy in not earlier disclosing his SS membership 63 Joachim Fest a biographer of Adolf Hitler remarked on Grass s disclosure After 60 years this confession comes a bit too late I can t understand how someone who for decades set himself up as a moral authority a rather smug one could pull this off 64 Others defended Grass saying his involuntary Waffen SS service came very early in his life resulting from his being drafted shortly after his seventeenth birthday They noted he had always after the war was lost been publicly critical of Germany s Nazi past For example novelist John Irving criticized those who would dismiss the achievements of a lifetime because of a mistake made as a teenager 65 Grass s biographer Michael Jurgs de described the controversy as resulting in the end of a moral institution 66 Lech Walesa initially criticized Grass for keeping silent about his Waffen SS membership for 60 years He later withdrew his criticism after reading Grass s letter to the mayor of Gdansk saying that Grass set the good example for the others 67 On 14 August 2006 the ruling party of Poland Law and Justice called on Grass to relinquish his honorary citizenship of Gdansk Jacek Kurski a Law and Justice politician said It is unacceptable for a city where the first blood was shed where World War II began to have a Waffen SS member as an honorary citizen 68 But according to a 2010 poll 69 70 ordered by city s authorities the vast majority of Gdansk citizens did not support Kurski s position The mayor of Gdansk Pawel Adamowicz said that he opposed submitting the affair to the municipal council because it was not for the council to judge history 71 Death edit nbsp Grass s grave in BehlendorfAn avid pipe smoker for most of his adult life Grass died at the age of 87 of a lung infection on 13 April 2015 in a Lubeck hospital 72 73 74 He was buried in a private family observance on 29 April in Behlendorf 15 miles south of Lubeck where he had lived since 1995 American novelist John Irving delivered the main eulogy at a memorial service for Grass on 10 May in the Theater Lubeck Among those who attended were German President Joachim Gauck former Chancellor Gerhard Schroder federal Commissioner for Culture Monika Grutters film director Volker Schlondorff and Pawel Adamowicz mayor of Gdansk 75 76 Grutters in remarks to mourners noted that through his work Grass championed the independence of artists and of art itself 77 Adamowicz said Grass had bridged the chasm between Germany and Poland and praised the novelist s unwillingness to compromise 78 Bibliography editDie Vorzuge der Windhuhner poems 1956 Steidl 2007 ISBN 978 3 86521 569 7 Die bosen Koche Ein Drama play 1956 ISSN 0722 8511 translated as The Wicked Cooks in Four Plays 1967 Hochwasser Ein Stuck in zwei Akten play 1957 The Flood Onkel Onkel Ein Spiel in vier Akten play 1958 Mister Mister Danziger Trilogie Die Blechtrommel novel 1959 trans The Tin Drum 1959 ISBN 978 0 679 72575 6 Katz und Maus novella 1961 trans Cat and Mouse 1963 ISBN 978 0 15 615551 9 Hundejahre novel 1963 trans Dog Years 1965 ISBN 978 0 7493 9450 9 Gleisdreieck poems 1960 Die Plebejer proben den Aufstand play 1966 trans The Plebeians Rehearse the Uprising 1966 Ausgefragt poems 1967 Uber das Selbstverstandliche Reden Aufsatze Offene Briefe Kommentare speeches essays 1968 trans Speak out Speeches Open Letters Commentaries 1969 with 3 additional pieces Ortlich betaubt novel 1969 trans Local Anaesthetic 1970 ISBN 978 0 449 24257 5 Davor play 1970 trans Max 1972 on a plot from Local Anaesthetic Aus dem Tagebuch einer Schnecke de political reportage 1972 trans From the Diary of a Snail 1973 ISBN 978 0 7493 9455 4 Der Burger und seine Stimme Reden Aufsatze Kommentare speeches essays 1974 Denkzettel Politische Reden und Aufsatze 1965 1976 political essays and speeches 1978 Der Butt novel 1977 trans The Flounder 1978 ISBN 978 0 15 631935 5 Das Treffen in Telgte novel 1979 trans The Meeting at Telgte 1981 Kopfgeburten oder Die Deutschen sterben aus novel 1980 trans Headbirths or the Germans are Dying Out 1982 Widerstand lernen Politische Gegenreden 1980 1983 political speeches 1984 Die Rattin novel 1986 trans The Rat 1987 ISBN 978 0 15 675830 7 Zunge zeigen Ein Tagebuch in Zeichnungen political diary 1988 trans Show Your Tongue 1989 Unkenrufe novel 1992 trans The Call of the Toad 1992 ISBN 978 0 15 615340 9 Ein weites Feld de novel 1995 trans Too Far Afield 2000 ISBN 978 0 15 601416 8 Mein Jahrhundert novel 1999 trans My Century 1999 ISBN 978 0 15 601141 9 Im Krebsgang novel 2002 trans Crabwalk 2002 ISBN 978 0 15 602970 4 Letzte Tanze poems 2003 Beim Hauten der Zwiebel memoir 2006 trans Peeling the Onion 2007 ISBN 978 0 15 603534 7 first volume of memoir Dummer August poems 2007 Die Box memoir 2008 trans The Box 2010 ISBN 978 0 09 953975 9 second volume of memoir Unterwegs von Deutschland nach Deutschland Tagebuch 1990 political diary 2009 trans From Germany to Germany Diary 1990 2012 ISBN 978 0 547 36460 5 Grimms Worter memoir 2010 Third volume of memoir 79 Vonne Endlichkait collection of prose poetry and drawings 2015 ISBN 978 3 95829 042 6Collections in English translation Four Plays 1967 including Ten Minutes to Buffalo In the Egg and Other Poems 1977 Two States One Nation 1990 79 Of All That Ends poetry and prose 6 December 2016 ISBN 978 0 544 78538 0Reviews editMurdoch Brian 1982 Sisyphean Labours which includes a review of Headbirths or The Germans are Dying Out in Cencrastus No 9 Summer 1982 p 46 ISSN 0264 0856See also editList of Nobel laureates in LiteratureReferences edit Woods Tim 2008 Grass Gunter Who s Who of Twentieth Century Novelists Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 70990 8 Zunge heraus Der Spiegel 4 September 1963 wurde Gunter Wilhelm Grass am 16 Oktober 1927 geboren Kulish Nicholas Bronner Ethan 8 April 2012 Gunter Grass tries to hose down row over Israel The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 10 April 2012 Retrieved 8 April 2012 Gunter Grass Germany s most famous living writer has tried to quell the growing controversy Outrage in Germany Der Spiegel 4 April 2012 Retrieved 4 April 2012 Gunter Grass Germany s most famous living author and the 1999 recipient of the Nobel Prize in literature Yishai Gunter Grass not welcome in Israel The Jerusalem Post 4 April 2012 Retrieved 4 April 2012 Germany s most famous living writer the Nobel literature laureate Gunter Grass Harding Luke Sherwood Harriet 8 April 2012 Outcry as Gunter Grass poem strongly criticises Israel The Hindu Chennai India Retrieved 8 April 2012 During his long literary career Gunter Grass has been many things Author playwright sculptor and unquestionably Germany s most famous living writer There is the 1999 Nobel Prize and Mr Grass s broader post war role as the country s moral conscience a b The Nobel Prize in Literature 1999 Nobelprize org Retrieved 8 October 2009 Garland The Oxford Companion to German Literature p 302 The Literary Encyclopedia Gunter Grass b 1927 Retrieved on 16 August 2006 Gunter Grass nie zyje Noblista mial 87 lat Gazeta Wyborcza 13 April 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2014 Pytany o tozsamosc narodowa mowil ze jest Kaszuba Asking about his ethnicity he always said that he s Kashubian Portrat Der unbequeme Nationaldichter Focus 13 April 2015 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2014 Aber wenige haben auch soviel einstecken mussen wie der Kaschube aus Danzig But just few people had to take flak like the mustachioed Kashubian from Danzig now Gdansk Poland Klsppel Klaus Matthei Olaf 2011 Polnische Ostseekuste Danzig Masuren Klaus Kloppel Olaf Matthei ISBN 978 3 8297 1258 3 Er bezeichnet sich selbst gerne als Kaschube Wer ist Gunter Grass Der Tagesspiegel 14 August 2006 Mayer Claudia 2002 Gunter Grass Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag p 16 Katholischen Mief Und Grass wundert sich Die offentliche Selbstrechtfertigung des grossen Schriftstellers ist so unnotig wie argerlich Die Zeit 2006 Nobel prize winner Grass admits serving in SS Reuters 11 August 2006 Archived from the original on 25 August 2006 Retrieved 11 August 2006 Autor Gunter Grass Ich war Mitglied der Waffen SS Der Spiegel 11 August 2006 Retrieved 11 August 2006 Gunter Grass was in the Waffen SS Survey of reactions to disclosure of time in the Waffen SS from the German and international press a b Gunter Grass im Interview Warum ich nach sechzig Jahren mein Schweigen breche Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Archived from the original on 8 August 2009 Retrieved 31 October 2010 a b c d e f g Taberner S ed 2009 The Cambridge Companion to Gunter Grass Cambridge University Presses pp xiv xviii Hammelehle Sebastian 13 April 2015 After many years spent living in Berlin s Friedenau district and a sojourn in the Algarve Portugal Grass settled in Behlendorf in Schleswig Holstein Der Spiegel Hamburg Retrieved 4 May 2015 Donahue Patrick 13 April 2005 Guenter Grass German Writer Who Took On Nazism Dies at 87 Bloomberg Retrieved 13 April 2015 Nobelpreistrager druckt dem SC Freiburg die Daumen RP Online 20 February 2000 Retrieved 13 April 2015 International Law Reports 1948 by Elihu Lauterpacht p 207 The Thomas Mann Handbook 2013 by Emily Smith page 168 Author of Tin Drum Gunter Grass died DC Books Archived from the original on 28 January 2016 Retrieved 15 April 2015 Mews 2008 passim Mews 2008 p 1 O Neill Patrick 2009 The Exploratory Fiction of Gunter Grass In Taberner S Ed ed The Cambridge Companion to Gunter Grass Cambridge University Press Finch Helen 2009 Gunter Grass and Gender In Taberner S Ed ed The Cambridge Companion to Gunter Grass Cambridge University Press Krimmer E 2008 Ein Volk von Opfern Germans as Victims in Gunter Grass s Die Blechtrommel and Im Krebsgang Seminar A Journal of Germanic Studies University of Toronto Press 44 2 272 290 a b c d Stephen Kinzer 13 April 2015 Gunter Grass German Novelist and Social Critic Dies at 87 The New York Times Izvor Moralic 1 October 2006 Book Review Gunter Grass Peeling the Onion Gunter Grass articulates his life eloquently describing the troubles of the post war generation and the desperate attempt to rebuild a life out of ruins while coming to terms with one s own guilt Viennareview net Archived from the original on 28 January 2016 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Tim Gardan 23 June 2007 Confessions of a super Grass Peeled it renews itself chopped it brings tears only during peeling does it speak the truth a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Arnds P O 2004 Representation subversion and eugenics in Gunter Grass sThe Tin Drum Camden House Taberner S Ed ed 2009 The Cambridge Companion to Gunter Grass Cambridge University Press Braun R 2008 Constructing Authorship in the Work of Gunter Grass Oxford University Press Arnds P O 2009 Gunter Grass and Magical Realism In Taberner S Ed ed The Cambridge Companion to Gunter Grass Cambridge University Press Mews 2008 p page needed Mews 2008 pp 107 146 195 Mews 2008 p 53 Mews 2008 p 55 Ruckgabe von Beutekunst Die letzten deutschen Kriegsgefangenen Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 26 October 2010 Archived from the original on 19 May 2011 Retrieved 31 October 2010 Polen stellt sich stur Der Spiegel 8 August 2007 in German Bar Zohar Ophir Ravid Barak 8 April 2012 Interior Minister declares Gunter Grass persona non grata in Israel Haaretz Retrieved 8 April 2012 Gunter Grass 5 April 2012 What Must Be Said The Guardian London Retrieved 15 January 2013 Weinthal Benjamin 3 January 2013 Benjamin Weinthal Berlin politicians split over Grass travel ban The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 15 January 2013 Avi Primor Peeling Gunter Grass Israeli Onion Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs Vol 6 No 2 2012 p 103 PDF Archived 25 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine Overview Campaign for a UN Parliamentary Assembly Retrieved 26 September 2017 Newsticker Suddeutsche Zeitung Gunter Grass stands by poem about Greece and Europe Ekathimerini 27 May 2012 Retrieved 15 January 2013 www dw com Deutsche Welle Gunter Grass leaves a last farewell book Books DW COM 26 August 2015 DW COM Retrieved 17 October 2016 Gunter Grass Deutsche Akademie fur Sprache und Dichtung Retrieved 12 November 2023 Royal Society of Literature All Fellows Royal Society of Literature Archived from the original on 5 March 2010 Retrieved 8 August 2010 Gunter Grass House Lubeck Archived from the original on 16 April 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Hidalgo Prize awards PDF Presencia Gitana Gunter Grass bliver arets Europaeer Jyllandsposten Ich war Mitglied der Waffen SS Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German 11 August 2006 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Wiegrefe Klaus 15 August 2006 Grass raumte als Kriegsgefangener Waffen SS Mitgliedschaft ein Der Spiegel Retrieved 31 October 2010 Noble laureate Gunter Grass dead at 87 New York Post 13 April 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2015 a b Grass Gunter 4 June 2007 How I Spent the War A recruit in the Waffen S S The New Yorker Retrieved 24 May 2007 Guenter Grass served in Waffen SS BBC News 11 August 2006 Retrieved 11 August 2006 Nobel Prize Winner Grass Under Fire for Belated SS Confession Deutsche Welle 14 August 2006 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Grass admits serving in Waffen SS Reuters 13 August 2006 Retrieved 13 August 2006 John Irving 19 August 2006 Gunter Grass is my hero as a writer and a moral compass The Guardian London Retrieved 19 August 2006 Echo auf Grass SS Vergangenheit Ende einer moralischen Instanz Der Spiegel 12 August 2006 Retrieved 31 October 2010 SS Vergangenheit Walesa macht Grass Ehrenburgerwurde streitig Der Spiegel Retrieved 31 October 2010 Kurski Grass nie rozumie czym zranil Polakow in Polish Wiadomosci 17 August 2006 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Kraj Gazeta pl Serwisy gazeta pl Archived from the original on 9 October 2008 Retrieved 31 October 2010 http bi gazeta pl im 4 3561 m3561294 jpg bare URL image file Rakowiec Malgorzata 14 August 2006 Grass asked to give up Polish title Edinburgh Reuters Retrieved 14 August 2006 dead link Renowned German author Gunter Grass dies aged 87 DW de Retrieved 14 April 2015 German author Guenter Grass dies BBC News 13 April 2015 Richard Lea 13 April 2015 Gunter Grass Nobel winning German novelist dies aged 87 The Guardian Abschied von Gunter Grass Der Konig der Spielzeughandler Der Spiegel 10 May 2015 in German Trauerfeier fur Gunter Grass Manchmal liebte er uns starker als wir selbst by Hubert Spiegel Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 10 May 2015 in German Bewegende Gedenkfeier fur Gunter Grass Lubecker Nachrichten Retrieved 10 May 2015 Jurgen Kowallik 10 May 2015 Gedenkfeier fur Gunter Grass Konig der Spielzeughandler ist gegangen Express Cologne Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 29 September 2019 a b The Nobel Prize in Literature 1999 Gunter Grass Bibliography Nobelprize org Retrieved 13 April 2015 Sources Mews Siegfried 2008 Gunter Grass and His Critics From The Tin Drum to Crabwalk Studies in German Literature Rochester New York Camden House ISBN 978 1 57113 062 4 OCLC 181424200 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gunter Grass nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Gunter Grass List of Works Gunter Grass at perlentaucher de das Kulturmagazin in German Gunter Grass at gdansk life com in English Grass admits serving with Waffen SS The Guardian Gaffney Elizabeth Summer 1991 Gunter Grass The Art of Fiction No 124 The Paris Review Summer 1991 119 Gunter Grass Norman Mailer 2007 The 20th Century on Trial Interview Interviewed by Andrew O Hagan New York Public Library Gunter Grass talking about The Tin Drum World Book Club BBC 3 October 2009 Appearances on C SPAN Gunter Grass at IMDb Gunter Grass on Nobelprize org nbsp Awards and achievementsPreceded by nbsp Henrik Prince Consort of Denmark European of the Year by the Danish European Movement 2012 Succeeded by nbsp Emmelie de Forest Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gunter Grass amp oldid 1193920783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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