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Dec 14, 2022 · They live apart from the simmering chaos, high up on the Marble Cliffs. The novel was immediately received as an allegory for the rise of the Third Reich, but as Jünger points out in a postscript, “People understood, even in occupied France, that ‘this shoe fit several feet.’”
Ernst Jünger (German pronunciation: [ɛʁnst ˈjʏŋɐ]; 29 March 1895 – 17 February 1998) was a German author, highly decorated soldier, philosopher, and entomologist who became publicly known for his World War I memoir Storm of Steel.
Jan 9, 2023 · In Approaches, Ernst Jünger documents an array of drug experiences, placing them in a richly intellectual context of cultural transformations and the literary history of drug use as well as art historical reflections on hallucinatory elements in Van Gogh, cubism, and surrealism.
Oct 12, 2024 · Daniil Zhitenev explores the life of Ernst Jünger in his secluded residence at the forester’s house in Wilflingen, highlighting the writer’s disciplined routines, vast collections, and the profound influence this setting had on his later works.
Oct 12, 2021 · In the sleepy village of Wilflingen, in southern Germany, stands the house of Ernst Jünger, an eccentric and controversial best-selling German novelist. A pioneer of sci-fi and magical realism ...
By Logan Frawley
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Feb 28, 2022 · What Jünger describes is what Sam Francis famously called anarcho-tyranny, something we see all around in the America of today (and, bizarrely, though inevitably in retrospect, suddenly in Canada).