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28 August 2024
7:00 pm to 8:00 pm
All ages welcome
£2
us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_KylqzoAjRAq2-YswMMqbAg#/registration
Online
Poetry
Read
Carcanet Press
Please join us to celebrate the launch of Partita and A Winter in Zürau by Gabriel Josipovici. The event will be hosted by David Herman and feature readings and discussion. Audience members will have the opportunity to ask their own questions. We will show the text during readings so that you can read along.
Registration for this online event will cost £2, redeemable against the cost of the book. You will receive the discount code and instructions for how to purchase the book in your confirmation email as well as during and after the event.
Register here https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_KylqzoAjRAq2-YswMMqbAg#/registration
Partita Fiction and non-fiction are two sides of the same coin. Or are they? Michael Penderecki is in flight. Someone has threatened to kill him. But who is the woman dead in the bathtub? And why does the voice of Yves Montand singing ‘Les Feuilles Mortes’ surge from the horn of an antiquated phonograph in an otherwise silent villa in Sils Maria?
This is the most enigmatic – and melodramatic – of Gabriel Josipovici’s novels to date. It is as though one of Magritte’s paintings had come to life to the rhythms of a Bach Partita.
A Winter in Zürau
Fiction and non-fiction are two sides of the same coin. Or are they? Franz Kafka is in flight. After spitting blood and being diagnosed with tuberculosis in the summer of 1917, his thirty-fourth year, he escapes from Prague to join his sister Ottla in her smallholding in Upper Bohemia. He leaves behind, he hopes, a dreaded office job, a dominating father, an importunate fiancée and the hothouse literary culture of his native city. Free of all this, he believes, he will at last be able to make sense of his existence and of his strange compulsion to write stories and novels which, he knows, will bring him neither fame nor financial reward.
But this is not fiction. It is an exploration of eight crucial months in the life of one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century, months of anguish and reflection preserved for us in his letters and journals of the time, and which resulted not just in the production of the famous Aphorisms but, as Josipovici shows in this compelling study, of some of his most resonant parables and story-fragments.
About the speakers:
Gabriel Josipovici was born in Nice in 1940 to Jewish parents of Italo-Russian, Romano-Levantine extraction. He lived in Egypt from 1945 to 1956, when he came to England. He read English at a St.Edmund Hall, Oxford and from 1963 to 1998 was first a lecturer, then a Professor in the School of European Studies at the University of Sussex. He is the author of some twenty novels, ten books of criticism, a memoir of his mother, the poet Sacha Rabinovitch, and numerous stage and radio plays. His reviews have appeared in the Guardian, The Independent, The Times Literary Supplement, the New York and the London Review of Books. Carcanet publish his novels and fictions Contre-Jour (1986), In the Fertile Land (1987), Steps (1990), The Big Glass (1991), In a Hotel Garden (1993) and Moo Pak (1995) and his essays Text and Voice (1993). His most recent novels are Goldberg: Variations (Carcanet, 2001) and Only Joking (Zweitausendeins, Germany, 2005). In 2006 Carcanet published a collection of his essays, The Singer on the Shore and his novel Everything Passes.
David Herman was a TV producer for twenty years and for the past twenty years has written more than 130 articles and reviews about literature and history for Prospect, The TLS, The New Statesman, The Jewish Chronicle, The Jewish Quarterly, PN Review, Salmagundi, Jewish Renaissance and The Association of Jewish Refugees. He has also given talks and conducted interviews for Jewish Book Week, The Lockdown University, JW3 and many other organisations. He has also published fourteen reviews of the work of Gabriel Josipovici.
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