Best Seller
Loading
Audiobook Download
Published on Feb 06, 2018 | 4 Hours 30 Minutes
W.G. Sebald’s military classic, ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF DESTRUCTION, will now be available for the first time in audio!
On the Natural History of Destruction is W.G. Sebald’s harrowing and precise investigation of one of the least examined “silences” of our time. In it, the acclaimed novelist examines the devastation of German cities by Allied bombardment, and the reasons for the astonishing absence of this unprecedented trauma from German history and culture.
This void in history is in part a repression of things — such as the death by fire of the city of Hamburg at the hands of the RAF — too terrible to bear. But rather than record the crises about them, writers sought to retrospectively justify their actions under the Nazis. For Sebald, this is an example of deliberate cultural amnesia; his analysis of its effects in and outside Germany has already provoked angry and painful debate.
Sebald’s incomparable novels are rooted in meticulous observation; his essays are novelistic. They include his childhood recollections of the war that spurred his horror at the collective amnesia around him. There are moments of black humour and, throughout, the unmatched sensitivity of Sebald’s intelligence. This book is a vital study of suffering and forgetting, of the morality hidden in artistic decisions, and of both compromised and genuine heroics.
Cover credits:
Photograph: World War II Berlin, 1945, by Yevgeny Khaldej/Granger www.granger.com.
Design: Peter Hassiepen/Hanser.
On the Natural History of Destruction is W.G. Sebald’s harrowing and precise investigation of one of the least examined “silences” of our time. In it, the acclaimed novelist examines the devastation of German cities by Allied bombardment, and the reasons for the astonishing absence of this unprecedented trauma from German history and culture.
This void in history is in part a repression of things — such as the death by fire of the city of Hamburg at the hands of the RAF — too terrible to bear. But rather than record the crises about them, writers sought to retrospectively justify their actions under the Nazis. For Sebald, this is an example of deliberate cultural amnesia; his analysis of its effects in and outside Germany has already provoked angry and painful debate.
Sebald’s incomparable novels are rooted in meticulous observation; his essays are novelistic. They include his childhood recollections of the war that spurred his horror at the collective amnesia around him. There are moments of black humour and, throughout, the unmatched sensitivity of Sebald’s intelligence. This book is a vital study of suffering and forgetting, of the morality hidden in artistic decisions, and of both compromised and genuine heroics.
Cover credits:
Photograph: World War II Berlin, 1945, by Yevgeny Khaldej/Granger www.granger.com.
Design: Peter Hassiepen/Hanser.
Author
W.G. Sebald
W. G. Sebald was born in Wertach im Allgäu, Germany, in 1944. He studied German language and literature in Freiburg, Switzerland, and Manchester. He taught at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, for thirty years, becoming professor of European literature in 1987, and from 1989 to 1994 was the first director of the British Centre for Literary Translation. His books The Rings of Saturn, The Emigrants, Vertigo, and Austerlitz have won a number of international awards, including the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Los Angeles Times Book Award, the Berlin Literature Prize, and the LiteraTour Nord Prize. He died in December 2001.
Learn More about W.G. SebaldYou May Also Like
Campo Santo
Paperback
$21.00
Tender
Paperback
$27.00
Light and Liberty
Paperback
$23.00
The Unwomanly Face of War
Paperback
$23.00
Across the Land and the Water
Paperback
$20.00
America America
Paperback
$16.00
A History of Women in America
Paperback
$8.99
California
Paperback
$23.00
The Castle in the Forest
Paperback
$18.00
×