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Belladonna av Daša Drndic
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Belladonna (utgåvan 2020)

av Daša Drndic, Roel Schuyt

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygOmnämnanden
1326206,539 (4.35)6
"From the author of the highly acclaimed Trieste, a fierce novel about history, memory, and illness. Andreas Ban, a psychologist who does not psychologize anymore and a writer who no longer writes, lives alone in a coastal town in Croatia. He sifts through the remnants of his life--his research, books, photographs--remembering old lovers and friends, the events of WWII, and the breakup of Yugoslavia. Ban's memories of Belgrade, Amsterdam, and Toronto alternate with meditations on the mental faculties of rats, a depressed arctic fox, and the agelessness of lobsters. He tries to push the past away, to "land on a little island of time in which tomorrow does not exist, in which yesterday is buried." Drndic leafs through the horrors of history with a cold unflinching wit. "The past is riddled with holes," she writes. "Souvenirs can't help here."--… (mer)
Medlem:gust
Titel:Belladonna
Författare:Daša Drndic
Andra författare:Roel Schuyt
Info:Amsterdam De Geus © 2020
Samlingar:Lästa men inte ägda
Betyg:****
Taggar:literatuur, roman, kroatië, 20

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Belladonna av Daša Drndić

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The twentieth century, a century of great tidying that ends in cleansing; the twentieth century, a century of cleansing, a century of erasure. Language perhaps remains, but it too is crumbling. A great burden falls on twentieth-century man and he drags himself out from under it, damaged.
Drndić takes a razor-sharp scythe to the lost histories and the continued legacies of Nazism and fascism, and, by suggesting that our failure to comprehend or to speak or to remember only perpetuates the erasure of these histories and is a form of passive complicity, she takes a razor-sharp scythe straight to your entrails, too.

Devastating, brutal, erudite, perfect. ( )
  proustitute | Apr 2, 2023 |
Notes/Thoughts
Lamentations on the malleability of memory, while life is approaching its inevitable expiration, as the body atrophies. The gusts of history, here taken over by the images of the 20th century, blow over places, people, the past, the murky future.

Mainly: a rumination on existential intersections across the fabric of time. On the side: an anxiety on the unraveling present, while comprehending a warped perception of history, the absence of perceiving history. At the same time: immortalisation of said history, several immortalisation of the dead through their inclusion in the text. Overall: an enduring exercise of resistance against Fascism through remembering, reminding. ( )
  lethalmauve | Nov 24, 2022 |
Honestly, a little too difficult for my state of mind when I tried to read it. Looking forward to re-reading, and reading Drndic's other books; always good to see someone do something smart and different. ( )
  stillatim | Oct 23, 2020 |
A novel that moves with power, a reminder that the act of remembering is so quotidian that we actually forgot the activeness of this process (it is not so much 'active' as reading is, but instead a passive ability that is often overlooked). This is an integration of the self within one's own direct and indirect ancestry, a compassion not just for state but for the history of the self and notations of the abuse that the self is put through. Andreas Ban may not be crawling naked on his belly up the Rue de Martyrs, instead he crawls through the twentieth-century exposing it's own tragedies in a sense so naked it is easily forgotten, because aren't we all now removed from those events living in the twenty-first century? Do we not have our own concerns?

Drndić can write five pages on Dutch food and the absurdness of the fascination that dominates contemporary mode of thought but then makes sense of it because it is in their history, because as a nation they are together overcoming a great hunger; for them to eat is to remember.

Drndić has written a novel that has such an intrinsic flow and cohesion that only few others can manage. Belladonna is a continuation of the Novel form that was once long thought dead. ( )
  Derezzination | Jul 10, 2019 |
‘’And the wind brought people who had let their plows rust; solitary people tiling the sky, reaping the harvests of summer nights, the fat grain of early straws, leaving it all unwinnowed. Instead they sued swords; their plowing was of bodies, their furrow cut to the heart; they plucked out hearts like tree stumps, they burst gall bladders, with livers they fed the vultures on their shoulders. At the last they rolled away the skulls like stones for building, but for building there was never time.’’

I don’t think I am capable (or even worthy) to write a text -let alone a so-called ‘’review’’- about one of the most terrifying, powerful, moving books I’ve ever had the blessing to read. This is a novel for which the verb ‘’love’’ holds no meaning. It is superficial and insubstantial. This is a novel that comes only once, maybe twice, in the life of a reader and leaves us speechless, staring in awe in front of the power of Literature and the horror committed by human beings. This is one of the most significant books one will ever read. In fact, it should be taught in every school in Europe. Perhaps then there would be a small glimpse of hope for change in a world that still lets politics define lives and codes of behaviour. A world that still adopts the evils of Nazism and Sovietism, the two faces of the same coin.

‘’Where is my face? Where is my past? Where is my resting place? Where is my grave?’’

Andreas Ban, our guide on a journey through the darkest periods of our recent History, through the horror of Nazism, the nightmare of Sovietism, the bloodshed during the 1990s. A psychologist who has failed to decode the evil in all of us and who has chosen to reside in a coastal town in Croatia. What we witness is his personal journey through seemingly disjointed thoughts and memories of a dark past and a tumultuous life. A life sealed with the bloody mark of war, terror, and despair. With the results of the mob that feels the need to kill just because they obey men who would frighten the Devil himself.

‘’...darkness like dust covers the losers and the victors mixed together in heroic blood and cowardly excrement.’’

Andreas focuses on the Nazi crimes and the terrors committed by the Ustaša regime which led to the massacre of Serbs, Jews, and Roma. He barely touches in the 90s war and this was refreshing. We know all there is to know about the 1990s conflicts in the Balkan peninsula but virtually nothing about the atrocities committed by the Nazi puppet states during the Second World War and the years prior to it. Andreas’s thoughts ask us to consider questions that seem to have no easy answers. What happens when you are the child of a war criminal, forced to carry an impossible burden? What happens when you are a citizen of a country that was responsible for unspeakable crimes? What hope is there when the result of a war for independence is the arrival of a new dictatorship?

Andreas is someone who craves truth as we crave air and water. Through the absurd persecution of the Jewish people over the centuries, he contemplates the futility of our existence, the horror created by a human being and the monsters born out of these actions. The countries that collaborated with the Third Reich paid the price but there is no future in a world that remains fixed in the past as a pretext to serve vile ambitions. Who is on the side of righteousness and who condones the crimes of the Nazis and the Communists? Whose opinion can the rest of us trust? There is an array of utterly disgusting Nationalists, Nazi worshippers, Stalinists, murderers and rapists that answers to the question ‘’how can a war start?’’ The reason why people become beasts following these ideologies is to be found in low education, low self-esteem, and all-around hereditary evilness. This is my personal explanation and observation.

‘’I sold my painting. Now I wander through deserted landscapes getting lost.’’

Andreas’s heart is in Belgrade and the violent rules imposed by war-mongers demand that he become an enemy. How can you put your past aside when war has taken away your identity? Andreas remembers children being humiliated by their teachers in the service of a tyrannical state. His mind is haunted by images from Bergen- Belsen, Auschwitz, and Dachau. The seven dwarfs of the Ovitz family, Mengele’s terror experiment. One more monster that was never punished for his crimes. The Šabac concentration camp where 25,000 people were imprisoned and 7,000 of them were massacred by the Nazis and their allies.

‘’I have let things slip, a thirty-year-old cargo boat
Stubbornly hanging on to my name and address…’’
Sylvia Plath, ‘’Tulips’’

Andreas takes us to Belgrade and the Sephardic cemetery which is a true beauty to behold. I visited a few years ago and the sight is moving and poignant. It is located next to the Cemetery of the Liberators and its unique Holocaust memorial and the monument commemorating the Kladovo transport when winter became a Nazi alley, condemning hundreds of people to a horrifying death. You can see some of the most impressive monuments in the Sephardic cemetery, created by Bogdan Bogdanović, one of the most renowned Serbian architects. Our journey continues to Zagreb, Split, and Imotski, three of the most beautiful cities of Croatia. To Amsterdam, Vienna, Leipzig. To Paris, Moscow, the Hague, and the seven shiny chairs, a monument in honour of the children taken by the Nazi beasts. Above all, the river Drina stands as a symbol of unity and the peaceful coexistence of people and religions which is so fragile and easy to tear down. Art in all its forms is Andreas’s faithful companion. Akhmatova, James Joyce, Pessoa, Beckett, Dubravka Ugrešić (one of my favourite writers), Plath, Pasternak, Andersen, O.Henry. Eisenstein, Picasso, Plisetskaya. The story of the rescue of the broken dolls and the crazy Clementia. The flowers as a symbol of life blooming and life withering and dying.

This is a masterpiece that cannot be compared to other novels with similar themes. This is the child of Daša Drndić, a modern, female Dostoevsky, perfectly translated by Celia Hawkesworth. An elegy to a life torn by isolation, guilt and the agony and struggle of sustaining even the faintest resemblance of life in the midst of a never-ending terror born by Fascism of both sides (right and left have zero differences. Their aim is to oppress and destroy) How can you let the sunshine in and avoid the poison of the belladonna when monsters still roam the world?
‘’Follow the histories of once-living people and converse with the ghosts. But people do not have the time.’’

The following extract is the daily reality I face as an educator and an observer that witnesses the new generation being led by right and left populists, unwashed anarchists whose dirt can be smelled by miles and mobile-phone and Facebook fashionistas whose already non-existent brains have turned into an extremely failed omelette.

‘’One girl told me that the Second World War had begun in 1945 and ended in 1950, another that Camus had lived in the eighteenth century. There are those who believe that ‘’The Bridge Over the Drina’’ is a five-act play, that ‘’Hamlet’’ is a novel. For some the middle ages lasted until the nineteenth century which is, all right, a fact one might accept. Eighty percent of my students had never been to the theatre, 99 percent had never gone to a single art exhibition. What have I wasted my life on.’’

My reviews can also be found on https://theopinionatedreaderblog.wordpress.com ( )
  AmaliaGavea | Mar 21, 2019 |
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» Lägg till fler författare (1 möjlig)

Författarens namnRollTyp av författareVerk?Status
Daša Drndićprimär författarealla utgåvorberäknat
Döbert, BrigitteÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Hawkesworth, CeliaÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Stipetić, BlankaÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
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"From the author of the highly acclaimed Trieste, a fierce novel about history, memory, and illness. Andreas Ban, a psychologist who does not psychologize anymore and a writer who no longer writes, lives alone in a coastal town in Croatia. He sifts through the remnants of his life--his research, books, photographs--remembering old lovers and friends, the events of WWII, and the breakup of Yugoslavia. Ban's memories of Belgrade, Amsterdam, and Toronto alternate with meditations on the mental faculties of rats, a depressed arctic fox, and the agelessness of lobsters. He tries to push the past away, to "land on a little island of time in which tomorrow does not exist, in which yesterday is buried." Drndic leafs through the horrors of history with a cold unflinching wit. "The past is riddled with holes," she writes. "Souvenirs can't help here."--

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