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Germany: SEP publishing house at Frankfurt Book Fair
Arbeiterpresse Verlag presents Voronskys Art as the
Cognition of Life
By Marianne Arens
22 October 2003
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The Arbeiterpresse Verlag, the publishing house that works
closely with the German Socialist Equality Party (Partei für
Soziale Gleichheit), was once again in attendance at this years
Frankfurt Book Fair, held October 8-13. The printing house celebrated
its 25th anniversary with a presentation of the first German translation
and publication of essays written by the outstanding Russian Marxist
Alexander K. VoronskyArt as the Cognition of Life.
Voronsky was the publisher of the most important Russian literary
magazine in the twenties, supported Leon Trotsky and the Left
Opposition in the struggle against Stalinism, and as a consequence
was executed by Stalin in 1937 during the Great Terror. The new
volume, which will be available for delivery within the next few
weeks, met with considerable interest.
The 55th Frankfurt Book Fair, which is the biggest event of
its sort in the world, registered around 300,000 visitors and
6,000 exhibitors from 102 countries. The high attendance reflected
renewed interest in the printed word. Nevertheless, the quality
of new publications was generally disappointing and the range
of events conducted in the course of the fair was very heterogeneous.
Meetings at the fair ranged from one featuring German writer
Günter Grass, which drew an attendance of 1,200, to the presentation
of the worlds biggest bookGOAT-Greatest Of All
Timea biography of boxing champion Muhammad Ali. Five
thousand turned out for a Russian Disco led by the
voguish Russian novelist Vladimir Kaminer, and large numbers also
attended the event organised for the appallingly untalented German
pop singer Dieter Bohlen, who presented yet another slice of his
biography.
The Peace Prize of the German Book Sellers Organisation, which
is awarded annually in a ceremony at the Frankfurt Paulskirche,
was given this year to American author Susan Sontag, described
in the text justifying the award as an intellectual ambassador
between the two continents.
Sontag, who in 1999 supported the NATO-led war against Yugoslavia,
describing it as a justified war against radical evil,
has spoken out recently on a number of occasions against the Bush
administration and the Iraq war. For this reason, the American
ambassador in Germany, Daniel Coates, who normally turns up for
such awards, absented himself from the meeting in Frankfurt, leading
Ms. Sontag to comment that he was more interested in confirming
the ideological position and ominous reaction of the Bush administration
than carrying out his normal diplomatic duties.
Anyone expecting the provocative speech that Sontag
had promised was to be disappointed. In the Paulskirche, Sontag
lectured on the gulf between the US and Europe, which she traced
back to the roots of America itself, thereby implying that the
current foreign policy differences between Germany and the US
have their origins in longstanding cultural and historical differences.
The conflict had deep roots, Sontag said. The writer,
who has recently developed the notion of a clash between European
and America interests and values, declared that she had not merely
invented this antagonism: The antagonismand it consists
of an antagonismis incapable of being resolved in the near
future, despite the best intentions of many people on both sides
of the Atlantic. It was necessary, however, to condemn those
who sought to exacerbate these differences, she added.
Additional cultural and political meetings, as well as readings,
exhibitions, book presentations, concerts, films and discussions,
took place at the book fair and at 13 other forums throughout
the city of Frankfurt and the state of Hesse.
At a meeting in the Frankfurt Trade Union House, Israeli Knesset
deputy Uri Avnery discussed perspectives for a just peace
in the Middle East with Palestinian professor Sumaya Farhat-Nasser.
The meeting room was packed, and there was considerable support
for a proposed international campaign against the wall of separation
that the Sharon government is building in West Jordan to further
isolate the Palestinians.
Every year, a different country is selected to provide a particular
high point for the fair, and this year it was Russias turn.
Next years fair will be dedicated to Arab countries.
Under the motto RussiaNew Sides, hundreds
of meetings were organised to provide a glimpse of modern Russian
culture. A significant section of the meetings, however, evidently
sought to revitalise pre-revolutionary tsarist Russia. On exhibit
were many religious icons, wooden dolls (Matroschkas), and mystical
relics, as well as displays devoted to the renowned Bernstein
Room and to an exchange of letters between the German King Wilhelm
II and the Russian Tsar Nicolas II.
The star of the book fair was Tatiana Tolstaya, the great niece
of Lev Tolstoy and granddaughter of Count Alexei Tolstoy. She
politically supports the so-called reformers around
former president Boris Yeltsin who plundered the country to get
rich quick following the dissolution of the Soviet bloc in 1991,
which resulted in widespread poverty and devastation for the broad
masses of the population. When questioned on this, Tolstaya retorted:
There are efforts being made to reverse the privatisation
which was carried out formerly and to deprive the rich of their
wealth. Such notions are stupid because they only force people
to shift their money abroad.
The central exhibit in the forum of the book fair dedicated
to Russia was sparse and unimaginative. Of greater interest were
the books displayed by members of the German Book Trade Federation,
which included many volumes dealing with contemporary history
and the books published by the Arbeiterpresse Verlagnotably
works by Leon Trotsky, as well as a number of the studies of Russian
history by the historian Vadim S. Rogovin.
See Also:
A.K. Voronskys
Art as the Cognition of Life: Art as the discovery
of truths, large and small
[19 September 1998]
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