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Bargfelder Ausgabe. Briefe von und an Arno Schmidt: Band 5: Briefwechsel mit Kollegen

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Arno Schmidt bemerkte einmal, er sei ein "fauler" Briefschreiber: "meine näheren Bekannten – denn ich habe deren tatsächlich – wissen das, & harren in Geduld. (Und der schönste ‹Brief›, den ein Autor versenden kann, ist & bleibt ja doch wohl das ‹Neue Buch›. –)" Diese Selbsteinschätzung paßt zwar zu dem öffentlichen Vorurteil über den "Solipsist in der Heide", ist aber nur die halbe Wahrheit, wie der vierte Band der Arno-Schmidt-Briefausgabe beweist.
Die komplett dargebotenen Korrespondenzen Schmidts mit Böll, Deschner, Döblin, Edschmid, Hesse, Jahnn, Kreuder, Rühmkorf, Stefl, Steinberg und Martin Walser (nebst einer Fülle von Einzelbriefen) zeigen Schmidt als einen Autor, der aus einer selbstgewählten Randposition sehr wohl die Mechanismen des Literaturbetriebs auf seine Weise zu bedienen wußte.
Der ausführliche Kommentar des Kölner Literaturwissenschaftlers Gregor Strick macht den Band zu einem Kompendium bundesrepublikanischer Literaturgeschichte, das weit über den Kreis der Schmidt-Leser hinaus Beachtung finden wird.

467 pages, Hardcover

Published October 1, 2007

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About the author

Arno Schmidt

240 books216 followers
Arno Schmidt, in full Arno Otto Schmidt, (born January 18, 1914, Hamburg-Hamm, Germany—died June 3, 1979, Celle), novelist, translator, and critic, whose experimental prose established him as the preeminent Modernist of 20th-century German literature.

With roots in both German Romanticism and Expressionism, he attempted to develop modern prose forms that correspond more closely to the workings of the conscious and subconscious mind and to revitalize a literary language that he considered debased by Nazism and war.

The influence of James Joyce and Sigmund Freud are apparent in both a collection of short stories, Kühe in Halbtrauer (1964; Country Matters), and, most especially, in Zettels Traum (1970; Bottom’s Dream)—a three-columned, more than 1,300-page, photo-offset typescript, centring on the mind and works of Poe. It was then that Schmidt developed his theory of “etyms,” the morphemes of language that betray subconscious desires. Two further works on the same grand scale are the “novella-comedy” Die Schule der Atheisten (1972; School for Atheists) and Abend mit Goldrand (1975; Evening Edged in Gold), a dream-scape that has as its focal point Hiëronymus Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights and that has come to be regarded as his finest and most mature work.

Schmidt was a man of vast autodidactic learning and Rabelaisian humour. Though complex and sometimes daunting, his works are enriched by inventive language and imbued with a profound commitment to humanity’s intellectual achievements.

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