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“Diese heiklen Formen” : destruction and desire in Durs Grünbein's Porzellan

Osborne, Dora

“Diese heiklen Formen” : destruction and desire in Durs Grünbein's Porzellan Thumbnail


Authors

Dora Osborne



Abstract

This article considers Durs Grünbein's use of porcelain in his 2005 collection, Porzellan. Poem vom Untergang meiner Stadt as a symbol for both Dresden's Baroque splendor and its destruction in the firestorm of February 1945. Moving between beautiful, intact artifacts and their shattered remains, Grünbein scrutinizes and critiques the postwar memorialization of his hometown. But there is, the poet admits, “secret eroticism” in his collection of Dresden poems, and porcelain is also central to Grünbein's problematic juxtaposition of desire and destruction: beautiful forms are implicated in a fantasy of violation where the poetic subject imagines the bombers' assault on the city as concubine. While Grünbein surely uses the incongruity of erotic fantasy and Dresden's desecration to challenge how the city has been remembered, Porzellan also betrays a sense of shame and unease about its own excesses, signalling the limits of such provocation.

Citation

Osborne, D. (2014). “Diese heiklen Formen” : destruction and desire in Durs Grünbein's Porzellan. The Germanic Review: Literature, Culture, Theory, 89(1), 20-39. https://doi.org/10.1080/00168890.2014.875429

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Apr 28, 2014
Publication Date Jan 1, 2014
Deposit Date Oct 8, 2015
Publicly Available Date Jun 6, 2016
Journal Germanic Review
Print ISSN 0016-8890
Electronic ISSN 1930-6962
Publisher Taylor and Francis Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 89
Issue 1
Pages 20-39
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/00168890.2014.875429

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