Nule i ništice
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Nule i ništice

Daniil Ivanovič Harms

A Croatian edition of the cult Russian avant-garde from the OBERIU group, a masterpiece of absurdity and a must-read for anyone who wants to understand how to write when writing is forbidden and life is impossible. Harms is not just funny – he is dangerou

Harms's world is absolutely absurd and brutally funny: people disappear in the middle of a sentence, fall out of a window for no reason, old women fly off the roof "one after another as if in a competition", Petrov kills Petrov, and everything happens in a vacuum without cause and effect. Logic is suspended, language falls apart, and the violence is childishly naive and at the same time horrifying.

Stalinist terror peeks between the lines: people disappear from stories just as they disappeared from life. Harms writes as if he were writing for the last time - and indeed he did: he was arrested in 1941 and starved to death in a psychiatric hospital during the siege of Leningrad.

Dubravka Ugrešić, who introduced Harms to the Croatian public back in the 1980s, has here made a masterful selection of over a hundred short prose pieces, "cases", poems, children's texts and theatrical miniatures written between 1926 and 1941.

This collection is a masterpiece of Russian absurdity, on a par with Gogol and Kafka, but more radical, shorter and funnier. Along with Beckett and Ionesco, Harms is one of the fathers of the theatre of the absurd. A must-read for anyone who loves literature that destroys meaning and at the same time creates it out of nothing.

Translation
Dubravka Ugrešić
Editor
Dubravka Ugrešić
Graphics design
Vesna Veselić
Dimensions
21 x 12.5 cm
Pages
176
Publisher
Europapress holding, Zagreb, 2010.
 
Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
Language: Croatian.
ISBN
978-9-53300-184-5

One copy is available

Condition:Used, excellent condition
 

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