ernst jünger in cyberspace

mailing list archive - Re: [ejlist] EJ, Indian Philosophy and Kind Words from the German Embassy in New Delhi

It boosted my morale to learn from  Bertil´s posting that there are people who 
regard EJ so highly like von Erffa and The Independent. In this country where it 
is so strictly un-PC to admire EJ openly I only dared to say aloud that I can 
read his writings again and again and always find new ideas and images that 
impress me deeply. And there are not many authors which I happen to re-read, 
Goethe, Schopenhauer, Montaigne, Shakespeare and very few others come to mind. 
The latter are indeed acknowledged "giants of world literature". If EJ belongs to 
them he probably is the one whose greatness has most furiously been contested by 
his countrymen. 

Let me quote an example for an unforgettable Lesefrucht, the image of the 
imminent catastrophe, from re-reading STRAHLUNGEN (4 Febr 1942): 

"Maschinenheizer im Kesselraum, wo hinter den Ventilen ein Druck von vielen 
Millionen Atmosphären preßt. Die Manometer steigen langsam über den letzten roten 
Strich. Es wird ganz still. Zuweilen leuchtet hinter den Panzergläsern der 
Schimmer von Flammen auf." 

Maybe a dream, maybe a visualization of a presentiment, written when Hitler was 
triumphant, and Stalingrad, Dresden, Auschwitz and Hiroshima were still under the 
horizon. Such writing goes under my skin. Moreover, I feel that in such passages 
EJ has achieved his aim of writing "eine Prosa, die Macht und Leichtigkeit 
vereint" (30 Jan 1942).

Bertil Häggman schrieb:
>
> Listmembers,
>
> In 1998 there was a Cultural Counsellor at the German Embassy in New Delhi,
>  Wolfgang von Erffa, who seems to be a devoted reader of Ernst Juenger. In
>  the Embassy "German News" he wrote in the March 1998 issue:
>
> "Ernst Juenger, a giant not only of German, but of world literature, has
>  passed away at the biblical age of 102 years. Von Erffa writes that EJ had
>  studied the Indian philosopher Shri Aurobindo and he calls
> for Indian specialists in German literature to research this link between
>  Juenger and India.
>
> Finally von Erffa quotes the British daily newspaper "The Independent" on
>  Ernst Juenger. "The greatest writer of the 20th century". Couldn't have
>  expressed it better myself.
>
> Juengerian greetings
>
> Bertil Haggman
>
>
>
> ** You are subscribed to ernst-juenger-l. To leave send a mail to
>  Majordomo@maillist.ox.ac.uk containing: unsubscribe ernst-juenger-l **
>



Markup © John King, 2008. Web archive generated Tue, 21st August 2007.