- Rabia Ashraf-History: Re-written, Revised or Revisited in Gunter Grass’s Crabwalk EUROPEAN ACADEMIC RESEARCH - Vol. III, Issue 9 / December 2015 9757 danger to the German land. Grass‟s novel Crabwalk chronicles and explores the terrible sufferings inflicted on East Prussian Germans who fled or were driven from their homeland during.
- The author of the Tin Drum takes on the worst maritime disaster in history, the sinking of a German cruise ship packed with refugees by a Soviet sub, a disaster that killed nine thousand people. Gunter Grass has been wrestling with Germany's past for decades now, but no book since The Tin Drum has generated as much excitement as this engrossing account of the sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff.
- Crabwalk is at once a captivating tale of a tragedy at sea and a critical meditation on Germany's struggle with its past. Born in Danzig, Germany in 1927, Gunter Grass is the widely acclaimed author of plays, essays, poems, and numerous novels. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1999.
Crabwalk by Gunter Grass. Start Free Trial Study Guide Homework Help Study Guide. By Gunter Grass. By Gunter Grass. ENotes.com will help you with any book or any question.
Crabwalk
Author | Günter Grass |
---|---|
Original title | Im Krebsgang |
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Steidl |
2002 | |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
ISBN | |
OCLC | 231972684 |
Crabwalk, published in Germany in 2002 as Im Krebsgang, is a novel by Danzig-born German author Günter Grass. As in earlier works, Grass concerns himself with the effects of the past on the present; he interweaves various strands and combines fact and fiction. While the murder of Wilhelm Gustloff by David Frankfurter and the sinking of the ship the Wilhelm Gustloff are real events, the fictional members of the Pokriefke family bring these events into our own time.
- Title1
- Plot summary2
- Characters3
- Konrad Pokriefke3.1
- Tulla Pokriefke3.2
- The old one3.3
- References4
Title
The title, Crabwalk, defined by Grass as 'scuttling backward to move forward,' refers to both the necessary reference to various events, some occurring at the same time, the same events that would lead to the eventual disaster. Crabwalk might also imply a more abstract backward glance at history, in order to allow a people to move forward. The protagonist's awkward relationships with his mother and his estranged son, explored via the crabbed process of scouring the wreckage of history for therapeutic insight, lends appropriateness to the title.
Plot summary
The narrator of the novella is the journalist Paul Pokriefke, who was born on 30 January 1945 on the day that the Strength Through Joy ship, the Wilhelm Gustloff, was sunk. His young mother-to-be, Tulla Pokriefke (born in Danzig, and already known to readers from two parts of the Danzig Trilogy, Cat and Mouse and Dog Years), found herself among the more than 10,000 passengers on the ship and was among those saved when it went down. According to Tulla, Paul was born at the moment the ship sank, on board the torpedo boat which had rescued them. His life is heavily influenced by these circumstances, above all because his mother Tulla continually urges him to fulfill his 'duty' and to commemorate the event in writing.
In the course of his research, the narrator discovers by chance that his estranged son Konny has also developed an interest in the ship as a result of Tulla's influence. On his website ('blutzeuge.de') he explores the murder of Gustloff and the sinking of the ship, in part through a dialogue in which he adopts the role of Gustloff, and that of David Frankfurter is taken by another young man, Wolfgang Stremplin.
The two eventually meet in Schwerin, Konny's and Gustloff's hometown. Wolfgang, though not Jewish, projects a Jewish persona. He spits three times on the former memorial to Gustloff, thus desecrating it in Konny's eyes. Konny shoots him dead, mirroring the shooting of Gustloff by Frankfurter; after the deed he hands himself in to the police and state that, 'I shot because I am a German'; Frankfurter had said, 'I shot because I am a Jew'.
The narrator is eventually forced to realise that his imprisoned son has himself become a new martyr, and is celebrated as such by neo-Nazis on the Internet.
Characters
Konrad Pokriefke
Konrad (known as 'Konny') is the son of Paul Pokriefke and Gabi; after his parents' divorce, Konny is brought up by his left-wing mother and has little contact with his father. Highly intelligent, he is characterised as a 'loner' by his parents. He has a very good relationship with Tulla, who tells him stories of the ship, and with whom he eventually goes to live. Via his website he forms a love-hate relationship with Wolfgang: divided by their political views, they are nevertheless connected by similar characters and a love for table-tennis. At his trial he claims that he has nothing against Jews themselves, but that he considers their presence among Aryan populations to be a 'foreign body'; his father considers that he has a 'slow-burning' hatred for the Jews.
Tulla Pokriefke
Tulla is short, thin, white-haired since the sinking of the ship, and attractive to men even into old age. Politically she is difficult to classify, except as an extremist: on the one hand she repeatedly praises the 'classless society' of the Strength Through Joy ship and supports her grandson even after the murder; on the other hand, she becomes a model functionary of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany in East Germany, weeping on the news of Joseph Stalin's death.
Tulla speaks with a strong accent (a form of Low German described by the narrator as 'Langfursch', after the part of Danzig she is from). She seeks at every opportunity to put the story of the ship into the public domain, because it was the subject of silence for so long. When her attempts to persuade her son to write about the disaster fail, she turns her attention instead to her grandson. She also supplies Konny with the weapon which he uses in the murder, after he is threatened by neo-Nazi skinheads.
Meron Mountain
The old one
The mysterious figure of the old one stands between Grass and the narrator Paul. Belonging to the generation of those who fled west after the end of the war, he encourages Paul to write of the sinking as a substitute for his own failure to do so. The narrator refers to him as his 'employer' or 'boss'. The possibility of identifying him with Grass serves to prevent the equation of the narrator with the author.
References
- Crabwalk. Transl. from the German by Krishna Winston. Orlando; Austin; New York; San Diego; Toronto; London: Harcourt: 2002. ISBN 0-15-100764-0
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Crabwalk has ratings and reviews. Steve said: R.I.P. Günter Grass ( ) Crabwalk, by Günter GrassGünter Grass’ Im Krebsgang appeare. The author of the Tin Drum takes on the worst maritime disaster in history, the sinking of a German cruise ship packed with refugees by a Soviet sub, a. In a novel that has already attracted attention on both sides of the Atlantic, Nobelist Grass (Too Far Afield) employs a compelling vehicle for his latest excursi.
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Grasw is clearly not one of the better efforts by Gunter Grass whose Tin Drum is one of the great classics of 20th Century literature. Please try again later.
All this written in the age of the Internet of which Grass is able to write about with surprising freshness, despite his age at the time of writing.
In the main, however, few people outside Germany know much about the sinking. It turns out that there were four captains on board, who between them made a series of disastrous decisions: And the ship itself was used by the Strength Through Joy organisation to give cheap cruises to select workers, including Paul’s mother and grandparents.
He found it in the strong character of Tulla, 18 at the time of the disaster and turning completely white on that day, who epitomizes the successful survivor and practical realist of her generation.
The novel ends with an unpleasant twist which feels cheap and exploitative. Der Schreibstil an sich war unglaublich anstrengend.
Crabwalk – Wikipedia
The narrator is a man who was born on the ship as it was sinking, or on the u-boat that rescued his pregnant mother, one of the more fascinating characters one can read about in any book. The dead are now thought to have numbered about 9, of which half may have been children.
For me, the main message of the book was to talk more open about the history so that we can prevent crimes motivated by right wing radicalism.
The writer himself claims in one of the beginning pages that he is going to narrate in a manner that resembles the way a crab walks; going forward and backward in a way that the overall result is a slow forward movement. She also supplies Konny with the weapon which he uses in the murder, after he is threatened by neo-Nazi skinheads. But at the same time, Grass also hints that decades of German self-flagellation after the war had brought about a reaction, causing young Konrad to ask whether the Nazis could really have been so evil.
Last but not least, this book shows a shrewd appreciation of the Internet and the way it can disseminate ideas of every kind, untested and unmoderated.
It’s as if ‘the Wilhelm Gustloff had never existed, as if there were no room for another maritime disaster, as if only the victims of the Titanic could be remembered, not those of the Gustloff’. Gnter Grass has been wrestling with Germany’s past for decades now, but no book since The Tin Drum has generated as much excitement as this engrossing account of the sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff.
Sincehe lived in West Germany, but in his fiction he frequently returned to the Danzig of his childhood. He married in and since lived in Berlin as well as part-time in Schleswig-Holstein.
Some find him impossible to read but for me his work is genius, the mature and serious way to do history and its current impact in fiction, ie not alternati What happened to Tulla from Langfuhr, her baby and her grandson, before, during and after drabwalk sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff which sailed from Gotenhafen Gdynia ctabwalk Unusually for its era, it was single-class. Collection inlibrary ; printdisabled ; internetarchivebooks ; china.
Why, then, remember the Gustloff?
Started in East Germany moved to the west but never amounted to much. Read reviews that mention wilhelm gustloff world war gunter grass david frankfurter sinking of the ship soviet submarine strength through joy third reich back and forth sinking of the wilhelm tin drum ship wilhelm move forward paul pokriefke east germany read this book nobel prize german people website ship was named.
He volunteered for submarine service crabwa,k the Kriegsmarine “to get out of the confinement he felt as a teenager in his parents’ house” which he considered – in a very negative way – civic Catholic lower middle class. What forces Paul to confront his, and Germany’s history is his own son’s neo-Nazi proclivities Grass offers other, subtler insights. Amazon Advertising Find, attract, and engage customers.
Crabwalk – Günter Grass – Google Books
The history of the Gustloff was fascinating and truly tragic, the complexity of German perceptions of its own past, and the dearth of comfortable answers make this book worth your time, even if it starts a little slow. A book on how evil or hatred depicted here on the affinity to the nazi ideology of some children at the end of the second world war doesn’t need a reason and will always find martyrs, because sacrifices are always seen with esteem and approval, even though the idea behind them is fundamentally wrong.
Paul Pokriefke, the journalist, doesn’t want to know about the past, and is almost vitriolic about his mother, This is the first I’ve read by Gunther Grass, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. He realizes that the site is maintained by his teenage son Konny who, influenced by his grandmother, has found in right-wing extremism the appetite to acknowledge the suffering of Germans during the war.
Prose in peril on the sea
In he became a Luftwaffenhelfer, then he was drafted into the Reichsarbeitsdienst, and in Novembershortly after his seventeenth birthday, into the Waffen-SS. Paul Pokriefke, the journalist, doesn’t want to know about the past, and is almost vitriolic about his mother, who is always going on about it.
The characters, too, could have involved you more. While his mother sees her whole existence in terms of that calamitous moment, Paul wishes their life could have been less touched by the past. Crabwalk is full of complaints that this terrible disaster losses hard to estimate, crabwxlk perhaps approaching 10, has none of the celebrity it deserves. He’s pressured into it by the major background player, Grass himself.