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The Tin Drum

The Tin Drum (German: Die Blechtrommel, pronounced [diː ˈblɛçˌtʁɔml̩] ) is a 1959 novel by Günter Grass, the first book of his Danzig Trilogy. It was adapted into a 1979 film, which won both the 1979 Palme d'Or and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1980.

The Tin Drum
Cover of the first German edition
AuthorGünter Grass
Original titleDie Blechtrommel
TranslatorRalph Manheim, Breon Mitchell
Cover artistGünter Grass
CountryWest Germany
LanguageGerman
SeriesDanzig Trilogy
GenreMagic realism
PublisherHermann Luchterhand Verlag
Publication date
1959
Published in English
1961
Pages576
OCLC3618781
833.914
Followed byCat and Mouse 

To "beat a tin drum" means to create a disturbance in order to bring attention to a cause.[1][2][3]

Plot edit

The story revolves around the life of Oskar Matzerath, as narrated by himself when confined in a mental hospital during the years 1952–1954. Born in 1924 in the Free City of Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland), with an adult's capacity for thought and perception, he decides never to grow up when he hears his father declare that he would become a grocer. Gifted with a piercing shriek that can shatter glass or be used as a weapon, Oskar declares himself to be one of those "clairaudient infants", whose "spiritual development is complete at birth and only needs to affirm itself". He retains the stature of a child while living through the beginning of World War II, several love affairs, and the world of postwar Europe. Through all this, a toy tin drum, the first of which he received as a present on his third birthday, followed by many replacement drums each time he wears one out from over-vigorous drumming, remains his treasured possession; he is willing to commit violence to retain it.

Oskar considers himself to have two "presumptive fathers"—his mother's husband Alfred Matzerath, a member of the Nazi Party, and her cousin and lover Jan Bronski, a Danzig Pole who is executed for defending the Polish Post Office in Danzig during the German invasion of Poland. Oskar's mother having died, Alfred marries Maria, a woman who is secretly Oskar's first mistress. After marrying Alfred, Maria gives birth to Kurt, whom Oskar thereafter refers to as his son. But Oskar is disappointed to find that the baby persists in growing up, and will not join him in ceasing to grow at the age of three.

During the war, Oskar joins a troupe of performing dwarfs who entertain the German troops at the front line. But when his second love, the diminutive Roswitha, is killed by Allied troops in the invasion of Normandy, Oskar returns to his family in Danzig where he becomes the leader of a criminal youth gang (akin to the Edelweiss Pirates). The Red Army soon captures Danzig, and Alfred is shot by invading troops after he goes into seizures while swallowing his party pin to avoid being revealed as a Nazi. Oskar bears some culpability for both of his presumptive fathers' deaths since he leads Jan Bronski to the Polish Post Office in an effort to get his drum repaired and he returns Alfred Matzerath's Nazi party pin while he is being interrogated by Soviet soldiers.

After the war Oskar, his widowed stepmother, and their son have to leave the now Polish city of Danzig and move to Düsseldorf, where he models in the nude and works engraving tombstones. Mounting tensions compel Oskar to live apart from Maria and Kurt; he decides on a flat owned by the Zeidlers. Upon moving in, he falls in love with Sister Dorothea, a neighbour, but he later fails to seduce her. During an encounter with fellow musician Klepp, Klepp asks Oskar how he has an authority over the judgement of music. Oskar, willing to prove himself once and for all, picks up his drum and sticks despite his vow to never play again after Alfred's death, and plays a measure on his drum. The ensuing events lead Klepp, Oskar, and Scholle, a guitarist, to form the Rhine River Three jazz band. They are discovered by Mr. Schmuh, who invites them to play at the Onion Cellar club. After a virtuoso performance, a record company talent seeker discovers Oskar the jazz drummer and offers a contract. Oskar soon achieves fame and riches. One day while walking through a field he finds a severed finger: the ring finger of Sister Dorothea, who has been murdered. He then meets and befriends Vittlar. Oskar allows himself to be falsely convicted of the murder and is confined to an insane asylum, where he writes his memoirs.

Characters edit

The novel is divided into three books. The main characters in each book are:[4]

Book One edit

  • Oskar Matzerath: Writes his memoirs from 1952 to 1954, age 28 to 30, appearing as a zeitgeist throughout historic milestones. He is the novel's main protagonist and unreliable narrator.
  • Bruno Munsterberg: Oskar's keeper, who watches him through a peep hole. He makes knot sculptures inspired by Oskar's stories.
  • Anna Koljaiczek Bronski: Oskar's grandmother, conceives Oscar's mother in 1899, which is when his memoir begins.
  • Joseph Koljaiczek ("Bang Bang Jop" or "Joe Colchic"): Oskar's grandfather, a "firebug".
  • Agnes Koljaiczek: Kashubian Oskar's mother.
  • Jan Bronski: Agnes's cousin and lover. Oskar's presumptive father. Politically sided with the Poles.
  • Alfred Matzerath: Agnes's husband. Oskar's other presumptive father. Politically sided with the Nazi Party.
  • Sigismund Markus: A Jewish businessman in Danzig who owns the toy store where Oskar gets his tin drums. The store is ruined during the Danzig Kristallnacht.

Book Two edit

  • Maria Truczinski: Girl hired by Alfred to help run his store after Agnes dies and with whom Oskar has his first sexual experience. She becomes pregnant and marries Alfred, but both Alfred and Oskar believe that they are Maria's child's father. She remains Oskar's family throughout the post-war years.
  • Bebra: Runs the theatrical troupe of dwarfs which Oskar joins to escape Danzig. He is later the paraplegic owner of Oskar's record company. Oskar's lifelong mentor and role model. He is a musical clown.
  • Roswitha Raguna: Bebra's mistress, then Oskar's. She is a beautiful Italian lady, but taller than Oskar, she has nevertheless chosen not to grow. She is the most celebrated somnambulist in all parts of Italy.
  • "The Dusters": Danzig street urchins gang, Oskar leads as "Jesus" after he proves his mettle by smashing all the windows with his voice at the abandoned Baltic Chocolate Factory.

Book Three edit

  • Sister Dorothea: A nurse from Düsseldorf and Oskar's love after Maria rejects him.
  • Egon Münzer (Klepp): Oskar's friend. Self-proclaimed communist and jazz flautist.
  • Gottfried Vittlar: Becomes friends with and then testifies against Oskar in the Ring Finger Case at Oskar's bidding.

Style edit

Oskar Matzerath is an unreliable narrator, as his sanity, or insanity, never becomes clear. He tells the tale in first person, though he occasionally diverts to third person, sometimes within the same sentence. As an unreliable narrator, he may contradict himself within his autobiography, as with his varying accounts of, but not exclusively, the Defense of the Polish Post Office, his grandfather Koljaiczek's fate, his paternal status over Kurt, Maria's son, and many others.

The novel is strongly political in nature, although it goes beyond a political novel in the writing's stylistic plurality. There are elements of allegory, myth and legend, placing it in the genre of magic realism.

The Tin Drum has religious overtones, both Jewish and Christian. Oskar holds conversations with both Jesus and Satan throughout the book. His gang members call him "Jesus", and he refers to himself as "Satan" later in the book.[4]

Critical reception edit

Initial reaction to The Tin Drum was mixed. It was called blasphemous and pornographic by some, and legal action was taken against it and Grass.[citation needed] However, by 1965 sentiment had cemented into public acceptance, and it soon became recognized as a classic of post-World War II literature, both in Germany and around the world.[4]

Translations edit

A translation into English by Ralph Manheim was published in 1961. A new 50th anniversary translation into English by Breon Mitchell was published in 2009.

Adaptations edit

Film edit

In 1979 a film adaptation appeared by Volker Schlöndorff. It covers only Books One and Two, concluding at the end of the war. It shared the 1979 Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or with Apocalypse Now. It also won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film of 1979 at the 1980 Academy Awards.

Radio edit

In 1996 a radio dramatisation starring Phil Daniels was broadcast by BBC Radio 4.[5] Adapted by Mike Walker, it won the British Writers Guild award for best dramatisation.[6]

Theatre edit

The Kneehigh Theatre company performed an adaption of the novel in 2017 at the Everyman Theatre located in Liverpool.[7] The production features the story from Oskar's birth through the war, ending with Oskar marrying Maria.[citation needed]

In popular culture edit

Bibliography edit

  • The Tin Drum. Random House, 1961, ISBN 9780613226820
  • The Tin Drum. Vintage Books. 1990. ISBN 978-0-679-72575-6.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The hypocrite's halo". The Washington Times. 20 August 2006.
  2. ^ Jeffrey Hart. . Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. Archived from the original on 28 December 2006.
  3. ^ "IMDb: The Tin Drum (1979)". IMDb.
  4. ^ a b c Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Christopher Giroux and Brigham Narins. Vol. 88. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995. pp. 19-40. From Literature Resource Center.
  5. ^ Hanks, Robert (3 June 1996). . The Independent. Independent News & Media. Archived from the original on 5 March 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2008.
  6. ^ . ABC Classic FM. ABC. 15 February 2007. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2008.
  7. ^ Love, Catherine (6 October 2017). "The Tin Drum review – Kneehigh turn Grass's fable into chaotic cabaret". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  8. ^ Return to the Onion Cellar: A Dark Rock Musical 20 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • Grass, Günter (4 October 2009). "Guenter Grass - The Tin Drum". World Book Club (Interview). Interviewed by Harriet Gilbert. BBC World Service. from the original on 9 April 2023. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  • Wunderlich, Dieter. "Die Blechtrommel Manuskript: 1956 - 1959". Dieter Wunderlich (in German). from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  • Gioia, Ted. . Conceptual Fiction. Archived from the original on 13 July 2022.

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For other uses see Tin drum disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Tin Drum news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German October 2016 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 8 940 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Die Blechtrommel see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Die Blechtrommel to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tin Drum German Die Blechtrommel pronounced diː ˈblɛcˌtʁɔml is a 1959 novel by Gunter Grass the first book of his Danzig Trilogy It was adapted into a 1979 film which won both the 1979 Palme d Or and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1980 The Tin DrumCover of the first German editionAuthorGunter GrassOriginal titleDie BlechtrommelTranslatorRalph Manheim Breon MitchellCover artistGunter GrassCountryWest GermanyLanguageGermanSeriesDanzig TrilogyGenreMagic realismPublisherHermann Luchterhand VerlagPublication date1959Published in English1961Pages576OCLC3618781Dewey Decimal833 914Followed byCat and Mouse To beat a tin drum means to create a disturbance in order to bring attention to a cause 1 2 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Characters 2 1 Book One 2 2 Book Two 2 3 Book Three 3 Style 4 Critical reception 5 Translations 6 Adaptations 6 1 Film 6 2 Radio 6 3 Theatre 7 In popular culture 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksPlot editThe story revolves around the life of Oskar Matzerath as narrated by himself when confined in a mental hospital during the years 1952 1954 Born in 1924 in the Free City of Danzig now Gdansk Poland with an adult s capacity for thought and perception he decides never to grow up when he hears his father declare that he would become a grocer Gifted with a piercing shriek that can shatter glass or be used as a weapon Oskar declares himself to be one of those clairaudient infants whose spiritual development is complete at birth and only needs to affirm itself He retains the stature of a child while living through the beginning of World War II several love affairs and the world of postwar Europe Through all this a toy tin drum the first of which he received as a present on his third birthday followed by many replacement drums each time he wears one out from over vigorous drumming remains his treasured possession he is willing to commit violence to retain it Oskar considers himself to have two presumptive fathers his mother s husband Alfred Matzerath a member of the Nazi Party and her cousin and lover Jan Bronski a Danzig Pole who is executed for defending the Polish Post Office in Danzig during the German invasion of Poland Oskar s mother having died Alfred marries Maria a woman who is secretly Oskar s first mistress After marrying Alfred Maria gives birth to Kurt whom Oskar thereafter refers to as his son But Oskar is disappointed to find that the baby persists in growing up and will not join him in ceasing to grow at the age of three During the war Oskar joins a troupe of performing dwarfs who entertain the German troops at the front line But when his second love the diminutive Roswitha is killed by Allied troops in the invasion of Normandy Oskar returns to his family in Danzig where he becomes the leader of a criminal youth gang akin to the Edelweiss Pirates The Red Army soon captures Danzig and Alfred is shot by invading troops after he goes into seizures while swallowing his party pin to avoid being revealed as a Nazi Oskar bears some culpability for both of his presumptive fathers deaths since he leads Jan Bronski to the Polish Post Office in an effort to get his drum repaired and he returns Alfred Matzerath s Nazi party pin while he is being interrogated by Soviet soldiers After the war Oskar his widowed stepmother and their son have to leave the now Polish city of Danzig and move to Dusseldorf where he models in the nude and works engraving tombstones Mounting tensions compel Oskar to live apart from Maria and Kurt he decides on a flat owned by the Zeidlers Upon moving in he falls in love with Sister Dorothea a neighbour but he later fails to seduce her During an encounter with fellow musician Klepp Klepp asks Oskar how he has an authority over the judgement of music Oskar willing to prove himself once and for all picks up his drum and sticks despite his vow to never play again after Alfred s death and plays a measure on his drum The ensuing events lead Klepp Oskar and Scholle a guitarist to form the Rhine River Three jazz band They are discovered by Mr Schmuh who invites them to play at the Onion Cellar club After a virtuoso performance a record company talent seeker discovers Oskar the jazz drummer and offers a contract Oskar soon achieves fame and riches One day while walking through a field he finds a severed finger the ring finger of Sister Dorothea who has been murdered He then meets and befriends Vittlar Oskar allows himself to be falsely convicted of the murder and is confined to an insane asylum where he writes his memoirs Characters editThe novel is divided into three books The main characters in each book are 4 Book One edit Oskar Matzerath Writes his memoirs from 1952 to 1954 age 28 to 30 appearing as a zeitgeist throughout historic milestones He is the novel s main protagonist and unreliable narrator Bruno Munsterberg Oskar s keeper who watches him through a peep hole He makes knot sculptures inspired by Oskar s stories Anna Koljaiczek Bronski Oskar s grandmother conceives Oscar s mother in 1899 which is when his memoir begins Joseph Koljaiczek Bang Bang Jop or Joe Colchic Oskar s grandfather a firebug Agnes Koljaiczek Kashubian Oskar s mother Jan Bronski Agnes s cousin and lover Oskar s presumptive father Politically sided with the Poles Alfred Matzerath Agnes s husband Oskar s other presumptive father Politically sided with the Nazi Party Sigismund Markus A Jewish businessman in Danzig who owns the toy store where Oskar gets his tin drums The store is ruined during the Danzig Kristallnacht Book Two edit Maria Truczinski Girl hired by Alfred to help run his store after Agnes dies and with whom Oskar has his first sexual experience She becomes pregnant and marries Alfred but both Alfred and Oskar believe that they are Maria s child s father She remains Oskar s family throughout the post war years Bebra Runs the theatrical troupe of dwarfs which Oskar joins to escape Danzig He is later the paraplegic owner of Oskar s record company Oskar s lifelong mentor and role model He is a musical clown Roswitha Raguna Bebra s mistress then Oskar s She is a beautiful Italian lady but taller than Oskar she has nevertheless chosen not to grow She is the most celebrated somnambulist in all parts of Italy The Dusters Danzig street urchins gang Oskar leads as Jesus after he proves his mettle by smashing all the windows with his voice at the abandoned Baltic Chocolate Factory Book Three edit Sister Dorothea A nurse from Dusseldorf and Oskar s love after Maria rejects him Egon Munzer Klepp Oskar s friend Self proclaimed communist and jazz flautist Gottfried Vittlar Becomes friends with and then testifies against Oskar in the Ring Finger Case at Oskar s bidding Style editOskar Matzerath is an unreliable narrator as his sanity or insanity never becomes clear He tells the tale in first person though he occasionally diverts to third person sometimes within the same sentence As an unreliable narrator he may contradict himself within his autobiography as with his varying accounts of but not exclusively the Defense of the Polish Post Office his grandfather Koljaiczek s fate his paternal status over Kurt Maria s son and many others The novel is strongly political in nature although it goes beyond a political novel in the writing s stylistic plurality There are elements of allegory myth and legend placing it in the genre of magic realism The Tin Drum has religious overtones both Jewish and Christian Oskar holds conversations with both Jesus and Satan throughout the book His gang members call him Jesus and he refers to himself as Satan later in the book 4 Critical reception editInitial reaction to The Tin Drum was mixed It was called blasphemous and pornographic by some and legal action was taken against it and Grass citation needed However by 1965 sentiment had cemented into public acceptance and it soon became recognized as a classic of post World War II literature both in Germany and around the world 4 Translations editA translation into English by Ralph Manheim was published in 1961 A new 50th anniversary translation into English by Breon Mitchell was published in 2009 Adaptations editFilm edit Main article The Tin Drum film In 1979 a film adaptation appeared by Volker Schlondorff It covers only Books One and Two concluding at the end of the war It shared the 1979 Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or with Apocalypse Now It also won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film of 1979 at the 1980 Academy Awards Radio edit In 1996 a radio dramatisation starring Phil Daniels was broadcast by BBC Radio 4 5 Adapted by Mike Walker it won the British Writers Guild award for best dramatisation 6 Theatre edit The Kneehigh Theatre company performed an adaption of the novel in 2017 at the Everyman Theatre located in Liverpool 7 The production features the story from Oskar s birth through the war ending with Oskar marrying Maria citation needed In popular culture editThe Onion Cellar a play by Amanda Palmer and Brian Viglione of The Dresden Dolls with the American Repertory Theater is based on a chapter in The Tin Drum Return to the Onion Cellar A Dark Rock Musical an original musical premiered in 2010 at the New York International Fringe Festival references The Tin Drum and Gunter Grass 8 The futurist band Japan named their final studio album Tin Drum The tin drum is featured in Season 2 of the Starz TV series Counterpart Emily Silk is seen carrying it around as she attempts to recover her memory following an attempted assassination In the series finale of Key and Peele The Tin Drum is listed as one of the movies that Ray Parker Jr wrote a song for on his greatest hits album The Tin Drum is a book in the home bookcase in the film Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf Bibliography editThe Tin Drum Random House 1961 ISBN 9780613226820 The Tin Drum Vintage Books 1990 ISBN 978 0 679 72575 6 See also edit nbsp Novels portalBest German Novels of the Twentieth CenturyReferences edit The hypocrite s halo The Washington Times 20 August 2006 Jeffrey Hart Response to How the Right Went Wrong Dartmouth Alumni Magazine Archived from the original on 28 December 2006 IMDb The Tin Drum 1979 IMDb a b c Contemporary Literary Criticism Ed Christopher Giroux and Brigham Narins Vol 88 Detroit Gale Research 1995 pp 19 40 From Literature Resource Center Hanks Robert 3 June 1996 radio review The Independent Independent News amp Media Archived from the original on 5 March 2009 Retrieved 19 September 2008 Music Details for Tuesday 4 February 1997 ABC Classic FM ABC 15 February 2007 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 September 2008 Love Catherine 6 October 2017 The Tin Drum review Kneehigh turn Grass s fable into chaotic cabaret The Guardian Retrieved 31 December 2020 Return to the Onion Cellar A Dark Rock Musical Archived 20 January 2016 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editGrass Gunter 4 October 2009 Guenter Grass The Tin Drum World Book Club Interview Interviewed by Harriet Gilbert BBC World Service Archived from the original on 9 April 2023 Retrieved 19 June 2023 Wunderlich Dieter Die Blechtrommel Manuskript 1956 1959 Dieter Wunderlich in German Archived from the original on 25 March 2023 Retrieved 19 June 2023 Gioia Ted The Tin Drum by Gunter Grass Conceptual Fiction Archived from the original on 13 July 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Tin Drum amp oldid 1180410063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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