Donau : biografie van een rivier

by Claudio Magris

Other authorsAnton Haakman (Translator)
Hardcover, 2020

Status

Available

Call number

2.magris

Tags

Publication

De Bezige Bij (2020), Edition: 01, 442 pages

User reviews

LibraryThing member jwhenderson
There are certain books that are sui generis and this is one of those books. In part, it reminded me of the cultural stories that the first historian, Herodotus, included in his original work , The Histories, that provides the foundation for the idea of written history. While he focuses on the mind
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of men who have lived and ruled and dreamed on and about the Danube, ultimately Magris's work is different and as a result unique in its aspect. Danube is both a catalog of histories and myths about a place over time. The place is a river that begins in a geographic region but also begins in a time and continues to exist through generations of changes to this day.

Included in the journey down the Danube through history are stories of people and places and times; stories that are both historical and fictional, mythical and real. These stories complement a travelogue that highlights places and times and people and more. Most interesting and important for this reader were the stories of literature that derives from the residents and the being of the river. The names are familiar and include: Kafka, Freud, Wittgenstein, Marcus Aurelius, Musil, Ovid, Celine, Von Rezzori, and others, some of whom I encountered for the first time in this work.

The book begins with a discussion of the sources of the Danube -- sources of the river which "were the object of investigations, conjectures or information of Herodotus, Strabo, Caesar, Pliny, Ptolemy, the Pseudo-Scymnus, Seneca, Mela and Eratosthenes." These sources and the river that they feed have been the subject of history, politics, philosophy, mythology, and geography for millennia during which the Roman and the Holy Roman Empires rose and fell along with subsequent cities and countries into the twentieth century.

Early in the book the Danube is described as "a sinuous master of irony, of that irony which created the greatness of Central European culture," and as such it is the central conduit of Mitteleuropa and all that it implies. The river encompasses many great cities such as Ulm "of the old Germany of the Holy Roman Empire", yet also the birthplace of Albert Einstein. And of course there is Vienna which is in some ways at the center of the Danube journey if for no other reason than its cultural impact that extends to the new world and to this day, decades after the documentation of the journey of the Danube.

Another highlight on the journey is Passau where we are reminded of the literature and art inspired by the Danube. The author narrates the story of Siegfried from the Song of the Niebelungs ( a story also found in the Nordic saga the Edda) and shares the love and loyalty that is rendered there. Yet it is also a region that inspired the twentieth-century literature of Kafka. The juxtaposition of Kafka with the ancient legends leads to an even stranger one when moving on to Linz one finds the journey progressing (regressing?) through a city that Hitler once planned to recreate into a "refuge of his old age, the place he yearned to retire to after consolidating the Reich that was to last a thousand years". Yet, fortunately for lovers of literature Linz was also the home of the novelist Adalbert Stifter who, even if you have not heard of him (and I had not), was capable of prose comparable to that of Flaubert's Education Sentimentale. It is this same river that also inspired works by Musil and Svevo. It is this literature that inspires Magris to comment as follows:

"Men without qualities, those landlocked armchair explorers, have their contraceptives always in their pockets, and Mitteleuropean culture taken as a whole is also a large-scale process of intellectual contraception. Whereas on the epic sea is Aphrodite born, and there--as Conrad writes -- we conquer forgiveness for our sins and the salvation of our immortal souls; we remember that once we were gods."(p 137)

The stories of the Danube continue to abound in this epic work. Included are the names like Hegel and Canetti and Roth; the historical figures like Eichmann and Princess Elisabeth and Vlad the Impaler; the music of Schubert and Mozart and Strauss. All are epitomized for this reader by Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy and Strauss's Blue Danube Waltz. Even the geography of the river itself begins and ends in myth.

There is more and it flows from the richness, the depth, and the historical grandeur of this book. It is one whose deepness reaches realms that make the challenge of reading it (it is not an "easy read") worthwhile. Finally it is one of the most erudite and intelligent books I have read and that makes it also one of the most enjoyable and interesting.
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LibraryThing member mattresslessness
Slightly tempting to compare Magris' cultural dredging of the Danube with something equally ambitious like Rebecca West's Black Lamb Grey Falcon, but whereas West's book of half-credulous received opinions comes off as an unreliable sort of Bloomsbury Herodotus, Magris is more reserved and a little
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detached. On the other hand, you certainly won't get any kind of coherent travel narrative here; the book merely methodically progresses in the subjects it addresses from one end of Europe to another, with an occassional anecdote thrown in where it suits.

It'd be easier to fault Magris for his sort of intellectual gentleman's-club style, which seems to revel in implying that every moment is made up of a tissue of insight and erudition, if damn near the whole book weren't made up of a tissue of insight and erudition. The odd occasion where he has nothing in particular to say can render the lofty style a little ridiculous, but it's never enough to spoil an otherwise brilliant trip through the nooks and crannies of eastern European culture.
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LibraryThing member ariadna73
This is a trip along the Danube river. This is a fascinating trip. Is like going there and staying at the hotels, and thinking about the history of the places. This is a great trip.
June 4: Ok. I'm done with it. I liked the trip a lot, and learned about the history and the places. It's really
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interesting to read this book, and as the author says, after that two-miles long film, we only want to stand up from our chairs, and eat some more popcorn.
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LibraryThing member LynnB
Didn't like this one. The author seems unconcerned with his audience,(in fact, onpage 311 he notes it can be an advantage to write for no one) or perhaps this book was not written for a broad audiene at all. Either way, there are references without context, a non-linear flow, convoluted prose and
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sentences up to seven lines long. And if ever a book cried out for pictures and a decent map (my copy has the Danube hidden in the fold), this is it.

I just couldn't get a sense of the basic narrative, However, I enjoyed the book more (but still not much) once I gave up and went with the flow. I imagined I was traveling down the Danube and various fellow-passengers were talking to me. Unfortunately, most were tedious and not very interesting.

However, as the author himself says (page 134), "really rotten books are rare". There are a few engaging stories along the way. Too few.
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LibraryThing member johnwbeha
Very disappointing. It was brought for me to accompany a cruise on the eponymous river, but it found it generally tedious, dealing as it did with vast numbers of people whose names I did not even recognise, let alone was interested in. There were a few pleasant and interesting sections but I found
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to had to stop at Budapest [where our cruise finished].
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Language

Original language

Italian

Original publication date

1986 (original Italian)
1989 (English: Creagh)

Physical description

442 p.; 8.78 inches

ISBN

9403196203 / 9789403196206
Page: 0.4129 seconds