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Anniversaries. From the Life of Gesine Cresspahl

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Tetralogy of novels by Uwe Johnson
Anniversaries. From the Life of Gesine Cresspahl

4
AuthorUwe Johnson
Original titleJahrestage 1-4: Aus dem Leben von Gesine Cresspahl
LanguageGerman
Published1970–83

Anniversaries: From a Year in the Life of Gesine Cresspahl (German: Jahrestage. Aus dem Leben von Gesine Cresspahl) is a tetralogy of novels by Uwe Johnson begun in 1970, with further volumes published in 1971, 1973, and finally in 1983. The main character, Gesine Cresspahl, is a German single mother in Manhattan, and we follow her life from childhood in 1930s rural Eastern Germany at the time of the rise of Nazism, through World War II, the Soviet occupation zone, the establishment of the GDR, and beginning of the Cold War, followed by her exile to New York. Eventually, she decides to return to Europe, and leaves for Prague, unaware that Soviet tanks have occupied the city and put down the Prague Spring. The novel has 367 short sections, one for each day of the year, from 21 August 1967 to 21 August 1968 (a leap year) plus a prelude section in the first volume and an appendix to the second, though it bears very little resemblance to a series of diary entries. The narrative moves between past and present, and often shifts rapidly from first- to third-person. Most sections incorporate news reports, as Gesine reads them in the New York Times each day on the subway.

Translations

An abridged translation by Leila Vennewitz (Volumes 1–3) and Walter Arndt (Volume 4) was published across two books in 1975 and 1987, with about 30 percent missing. A full translation by Damion Searls was published by New York Review Books in 2018 as a two-volume single novel.

Reception

The 2018 translation by Damion Searls was met with much critical acclaim though most reviews noted the sheer length of the work made it a challenging read. Jonathan Steinberg reviewing for The Spectator called the novel "an astonishing achievement". Anthony Cummins writing in The Guardian praised it as a "monumental work" and also suggested it might be "the novel of the year." The Atlantic praised it as a "novel of vaulting formal ambition". Parul Sehgal reviewing for The New York Times was more lukewarm on the novel calling it "painstaking".

References

  1. Graham Bartram The Cambridge Companion to the Modern German Novel 2004 p.121 0521483921 "Uwe Johnson, Anniversaries One cannot conclude a discussion of the city in the twentieth-century German novel without mention of Manhattan, and Uwe Johnson's tetralogy may be considered representative of postwar visions of the city."
  2. Meinolf Schumacher: Occupied by Comrades? The Concealed Story of the Soviet Military Presence in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania after 1945 in Uwe Johnson’s Jahrestage (1970–1983). In Matthias Buschmeier and Jeanne E. Glesener (eds.), European Literatures of Military Occupation. Shared Experience, Shifting Boundaries, and Aesthetic Affections. Leuven: Leuven University Press 2024, pp. 355–84 doi:10.4119/unibi/2990689
  3. D. G. Bond German History and German Identity: Uwe Johnson's Jahrestage 9051834594 1993 "It is the former in which I am interested in this chapter, as they are revealed in the fictional story of Gesine Cresspahl. ... This turning point - crisis is too strong a word - leads to her decision to go to Prague in order to work for the Czech attempts ..."
  4. Ansgar Nünning, Kai Marcel Sicks Turning Points: Concepts and Narratives of Change in Literature 2012 3110297108 "(Anniversaries - From the Life of Gesine Cresspahl) was published in four volumes: the first appeared in 1970, the second in 1971, the third in 1973 ... to Prague, still unaware that Soviet tanks have occupied the city and put down the so-called Prague Spring."
  5. Baker, Gary Lee (1999). Understanding Uwe Johnson. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-57003-282-0.
  6. Damion Searls website
  7. Steinberg, Jonathan. "Uwe Johnson's Anniversaries is an astonishing achievement". Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  8. Cummins, Anthony (30 December 2018). "Anniversaries by Uwe Johnson review – witness to worlds in turmoil". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  9. ILLINGWORTH, DUSTIN (16 October 2018). "The Decades-Old Novel That Presages Today's Fight for Facts". The Atlantic. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  10. Sehgal, Parul. "A Masterpiece That Requires Your Full Attention — and a Lot of Time". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
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