Marianne Fritz (1948–2007) was an Austrian novelist. Her first book, The Weight of Things, marked the beginning of an ambitious cycle of novels with the overarching title of Festung, or “The Fortress,” comprising Das Kind der Gewalt und die Sterne der Romani, Dessen Sprache du nicht verstehst, and the gargantuan Naturgemäß, the third volume of which she was preparing at the time of her death.
Ali's comment :: "Marianne Fritz. English scholarship on Fritz in general and her last two massive novels in particular is scant, to say the least (she's venerated among Austrian elitists, though), but critics have been helpfully hostile to her unreadybabble prose (her proofreader stopped correcting errors after a thousand pages of Dessen Sprache du nicht Verstehst because it was impossible to distinguish legitimate mistakes from deliberate lingualistic mangulations, and she's even got a footstamp of disapproval from Thomas Bernhard!) and I'm seeing stylistic and typographic echoes of Schmidt/bpNichol/maybe/possibly/Brooke-Rose?" https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Most of the early reviews did not originate in a reading of the novel, but rather from many prejudices. It’s quite a shame that there is so few useful secondary literature on this work, which may be one of the most complex epics of the 20th century – together with the works of Joyce, Proust or Musil.
Reviews that I could recommend are by Köhlmeier, Liessmann, Dath, Rathjen, but I'm afraid they are buried deep somewhere in archives (some of them are preserved by the "Literaturhaus Wien", in case you live nearby).
Also, there is a short book (based on a viennese conference), ed. by K. Kastberger: "Nullgeschichte, die trotzdem war" (Wien: Sonderzahl 1995), and there is the chapter "Geschichte im Sprachzerfall" in "Ohne Mitleid" by Konrad Paul Liessmann (Wien: Passagen 1991).
Where do I find a proper pdf of this book?? I just want to read it, but it seems to be almost a lost media sometimes. There is someone here who has the complete novel in any link or something? Like, I'm honestly spending a good time searching for a complete version of Dessen Sprache and I would love to be saved by someone who has it. I've been searching this for a looong time, and every link I take just dumps me in another dead end. So please, someone tell me where people really have read this book.
It says here that there are six people reading DS rn... I would really like if one of you angels told me where to read it too.