German Lesson

Paperback, 476 pages

English language

Published April 1, 1986 by New Directions Publishing Corporation.

ISBN:
978-0-8112-0982-3
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4 stars (2 reviews)

Siggi Jepsen (the first-person narrator), an inmate of a juvenile detention center, is forced to write an essay with the title "The Joy of Duty." In the essay, Siggi describes his youth in Nazi Germany where his father, the "most northerly police officer in Germany," does his duty, even when he is ordered to debar his old childhood friend, the expressionist painter Max Nansen, from his profession, because the Nazis banned expressionism as "degenerate art" (entartete Kunst).

Siggi, however, is fascinated by Nansen's paintings, "the green faces, the Mongol eyes, these deformed bodies ... " and, without the knowledge of his father, manages to hide some of the confiscated paintings. Following the end of World War II, Jepsen senior is interned for a short time and later reinstalled as a policeman in rural Schleswig-Holstein. When he then obsessively continues to carry out his former orders, Siggi brings Nansen paintings that …

19 editions

Subjects

  • Modern fiction
  • Novels, other prose & writers: from c 1900 -
  • Fiction - General
  • German
  • Fiction
  • Literary
  • Fiction / Literary