Skip navigation.

Log in | Sign up

photo of E. Driver

As listed below

Posts tagged with "websites"

John Milton Reading Room / A website tip

, , , ...


I've added a new link to my sidebar. The John Milton Reading Room contains all of John Milton's poetry and a nice selection of his prose.


A short biography of John Milton (1608-1674)

John Milton wrote essays, sonnets and, most importantly, Paradise Lost, considered by many scholars the greatest epic poem of the English language. Milton was a Londoner and received his education at Cambridge (1625-32), where he wrote his famous poem "On the Morning of Christ's Nativity." During his career Milton was an active voice on contemporary issues of politics and religion, and during the English Civil War he sided with the anti-royalists under Oliver Cromwell.

His rousing tracts supporting the Commonwealth -- which included an argument defending the execution of Charles I -- led to a position as a foreign secretary (1649). Milton somehow managed to escape serious punishment after the restoration of the monarchy (1660) and lived the remainder of his life quietly. Blind after 1652, he dictated the entirety of Paradise Lost (1667), the story of Satan's rebellion (and defeat) and the fall of Adam and Eve.

Four years later he published the story of Christ's triumph over Satan's temptations in Paradise Regained and the drama Samson Agonistes. His other famous writings include the masque Comus (1637), a defense of free speech titled Areopagiticaz (1644) and several sonnets, including "On His Blindness" ("When I consider how my light is spent") and "On His Deceased Wife" ("Methought I saw my late espoused saint"). | © Answers.com

The "Baader Café" in Munich, Baaderstraße 47

, , , ...


Baader Café

If you're in Munich and if you're looking for an English breakfast with bacon and eggs, toast, sausages, beans and so on, try the "Baader Café". Of course, you can get other dishes there as well.

I prefer going there in the daytime. It's a nice place with a familiar atmosphere.

For further information have a look at http://www.peppermind.de/baader . (German)

Exhibition with videos by German artists in Duesseldorf

, , , ...


"Spin off" with nice videos by German artists

Karin Hochstatter shows in this exhibition videos by German artists in Duesseldorf, Germany.

The event starts at 10 pm on the 12th of May in the WP8.

You'll find the WP8 in the Koelner Strasse 73 in 40211 Duesseldorf. If you're close-by join that elaborate and varied exhibition.

For some more information have a look here: WP8

Müller: Glückloser Engel 2 / Hapless Angel 2 (Poetry)

, , , ...


About Heiner Müller

Heiner Müller (January 9, 1929 – December 30, 1995) was an East German dramatist and writer. Müller was born in Eppendorf, Saxony. He joined the Socialist Unity Party of Germany in 1947 and began serving for the German Writers' Association in 1954. Müller initially became one of the most important dramatists of the German Democratic Republic and won the Heinrich Mann Prize in 1959. His relationship with the East German state began to deteriorate, however, with his drama Die Umsiedlerin (The Resettler Woman) which was censored in 1961 after only one performance.

Müller was banned from the Writers' Association in the same year. The East German government remained wary of Müller in subsequent years, preventing the premiere of Der Bau (Construction Site) in 1965 and censoring his Mauser in the early 1970s. Müller began to work with West German ensembles and theater houses in the 1970s and 80s, directing premieres of some of his best-known works in Munich (Germania Tod in Berlin (Germania Death in Berlin), 1978), Essen (Hamletmaschine (Hamletmachine), 1979) and Bochum (Der Auftrag (The Mission), 1982).

Due to his growing world-wide fame, Müller was able to gain more widespread acceptance in East Germany again, as well. He was admitted to the Academy of Arts of the GDR in 1984, but almost at the same time became a member of the Academy of the Arts of West Berlin in 1986. Despite earlier honors, Müller was not readmitted to the East German Writers' Association until 1988, shortly before the end of the GDR. After the fall of the Wall, Müller even became president of the Academy of the Arts of the GDR for a short time in 1990.

The last five years of his life Müller continued to live in Berlin and work all over Germany and Europe, mostly producing stagings of his own works. He wrote few new dramatic texts in this time, though, like Brecht, he did produce much poetry in his final years. Müller died in East Berlin in 1995, acknowledged as one of the greatest living German authors and the most important German dramatist since Bertolt Brecht.

An edition of his complete works is currently being edited and published by Suhrkamp, seven of nine planned volumes having been completed (as of 2004). Among his better known works, other than those already mentioned, are Wolokolamsker Chaussee (The Road to Volokolamsk) Parts I-V, Verkommenes Ufer Medeamaterial Landschaft mit Argonauten (Despoiled Shore Medea Material Landscape with Argonauts), Philoktet (Philoctetes), Zement (Cement) and Quartett. (Wikipedia)



Glückloser Engel 2
 
Zwischen Stadt und Stadt
Nach der Mauer der Abgrund
Wind an den Schultern die fremde
Hand am einsamen Fleisch
Der Engel ich höre ihn noch
Aber er hat kein Gesicht mehr als
Deines das ich nicht kenne



Hapless Angel 2

Between city and city
After the wall the abyss
Wind at the shoulders The alien
Hand at the lonely flesh
The angel I still hear him
Yet he has no face anymore but
Yours that I don't know

Translation into English © Carl Weber



To read some more poems by Heiner Müller in English translations please click here:
http://www.efn.org/~dredmond/MuellerPoems.html

The "Stadtcafé" in Munich / www.stadtcafe-muenchen.de

, , , ...


Where to go in Munich

Especially in the daytime
a laid-back place
to go for in Munich
is the "Stadtcafé".

They serve small dishes
and have a big variety
of international newspapers.

Next to the "Stadcafé"
there is a very nice
repertory cinema too.

Take also a look at http://www.stadtcafe-muenchen.de .

A website about the composer J. S. Bach

, , , ...


Please click here to view a very nice site about Johann Sebastian Bach's life, works and recordings: http://www.jsbach.org


About Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach (21 March 1685 O.S. – 28 July 1750 N.S.) was a German composer and organist whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra and solo instruments drew together almost all of the strands of the baroque style and brought it to its ultimate maturity. Although he introduced no new musical forms, he enriched the prevailing German style with a robust and dazzling contrapuntal technique, a seemingly effortless control of harmonic and motivic organisation from the smallest to the largest scales, and the adaptation of rhythms and textures from abroad, particularly Italy and France. Bach's forceful suavity and vast output have earned him wide acknowledgment as one of the greatest composers in the Western tonal tradition. Revered for their intellectual depth, technical command and artistic beauty, his works include the Brandenburg concertos, the keyboard suites and partitas, the Mass in B Minor, the St. Matthew Passion, The Musical Offering, The Art of Fugue and a large number of cantatas, of which about 220 survive. (Wikipedia)

Cinema = Godard / A website about Jean-Luc Godard

, , , ...


Please click here to view a very interesting site about the life and work of the Franco-Swiss filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard: Cinema = Godard


About Jean-Luc Godard

Jean-Luc Godard (born December 3, 1930, Paris) is a Franco-Swiss filmmaker and one of the most influential members of the Nouvelle Vague, or "French New Wave". Born in Paris to Franco-Swiss parents, he was educated in Nyon, later studying at the Lycée Rohmer, and the Sorbonne in Paris. During his time at the Sorbonne, he became involved with the young group of filmmakers and theorists that gave birth to the New Wave. Known for stylistic implementations that challenged, at their focus, the conventions of Hollywood cinema, he became universally recognized as the most audacious and most radical of the New Wave filmmakers. He adopted a position in filmmaking that was unambiguously political. His work reflected a fervent knowledge of film history, a comprehensive understanding of existential and Marxist philosophy, and a scholarly disposition that placed him as the lone filmmaker among the public intellectuals of the Rive Gauche. | © Wikipedia

A website about the Norwegian painter Edvard Munch

, , , ...


Please click here to view an excellent website about the life and work of the Norwegian painter and printmaker Edvard Munch: Website about Edvard Munch


About Edvard Munch

Edvard Munch (December 12, 1863 – January 23, 1944) was a Norwegian expressionist painter and printmaker.

His intense, evocative treatment of anguish greatly influenced development of German expressionism in the early 20th century.

The Scream (1893; originally called Despair), Munch's best-known painting, is regarded as an icon of existential anguish. As with many of his works, he painted several versions of it.

The Scream is one of the pieces in a series titled The Frieze of Life, in which Munch explored the themes of life, love, fear, death and melancholy.

It was stolen from the Munch-museum in Oslo, Norway, on August 22, 2004. There have been unsubstantiated rumors that the painting was destroyed by the thieves.

The Frieze of Life themes recur throughout Munch's work, in paintings such as The Sick Child (1886, portrait of his deceased sister Sophie), Vampire (1893–94), Ashes (1894), and The Bridge. The latter shows limp figures with featureless or hidden faces, over which loom the threatening shapes of heavy trees and brooding houses.

Munch portrayed women either as frail, innocent sufferers or as lurid, life-devouring vampires. Munch analysts say this reflects his sexual anxieties. | © Wikipedia

The "Lisboa Bar" / A Portuguese bar in Munich

, , , ...


Bem vindo!

So here is a recommendation for all people who might visit Munich in the future:
The Lisboa Bar. This is the oldest Portuguese restaurant in Munich. There is also a branch of this bar in Lisboa, Portugal.

They've got very nice Portuguese food, wine, beer, cocktails and galao. On Sunday evenings there is live music too. Usually it's either Fado music from Portugal or Brazilian music.

Opening hours are daily between 6 p.m. and 1 a.m. And on Sundays (nice breakfast) they open at 10 a.m. You can eat until midnight.

Take also a look at http://www.lisboa-bar.de . (German website)