Incidentally, Jünger himself knew of this film, as a short passage from The Details of Time: Conversations with Ernst Jünger reveals. In those conversations with Julian Hervier, he only indicates that he had given the director Cozarinsky permission to make the film and in retrospect had no reason to regret the decision. Indeed - it is well done and provides excellent context for Jünger's difficult and yet enriching experience in occupied Paris. A big bonus: it has English subtitles with mostly decent translations of the Strahlungen citations.
We aspire to an objective, practical understanding of Ernst Jünger's life and works, and encourage other seekers of freedom and self-realisation to join us. Jünger's insights can function as a valuable roadmap to freedom and meaning for individuals in today's social and spiritual landscape. Crucial is his figure of the autonomous and inwardly-free anarch (in contrast to the impotent and self-destructive anarchist) as presented in his important novel EUMESWIL.
July 11, 2011
One Man's War - Ernst Jünger in Paris
Incidentally, Jünger himself knew of this film, as a short passage from The Details of Time: Conversations with Ernst Jünger reveals. In those conversations with Julian Hervier, he only indicates that he had given the director Cozarinsky permission to make the film and in retrospect had no reason to regret the decision. Indeed - it is well done and provides excellent context for Jünger's difficult and yet enriching experience in occupied Paris. A big bonus: it has English subtitles with mostly decent translations of the Strahlungen citations.
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A fascinating film. I was lucky enough to live in Paris between 1990 and 1996, and it was striking how little WW2 and the occupation was discussed or even (so it seemed) remembered.
ReplyDeleteThanks to watching this rather harrowing film, I can now understand the deep levels of shame and the huge splits in French society that the occupation caused.
The propaganda is (to a modern sensibility) crass and transparent, and yet it's also undeniable that various public meetings and rallies in the film are well attended, and the applause and approval given to various horrible speeches genuine.
The everyday hardship of life in the city for ordinary people is also very apparent. It's a great shame that nobody has ever published Junger's 'reflections' of that period in English - I'm sure there would be a market for them.
Indeed, it is generally a shame that Juenger's works are so little represented in English. Nevertheless, I am hopeful this will soon change - and try to do my part with this English blog!
ReplyDeleteA fascinating film indeed. I wonder how crass and transparent our own forms of propaganda will seem in 50 years or so. Listening to American television already sounds rather like propaganda to me - and if one listens to Fox or CNN news clips from Desert Storm etc, they are little different than these WWII ones. It takes a special ability to distance to be able to judge one's own society as if from the future or another continent.
I'm an young Ernst Junger fan - and having just finished Details of Time I'd be extremely interested in seeing this.
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