Morenga
Roman
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
»Ein brillantes Buch.« Main-Echo.
Deutsch-Südwestafrika, 1904. Beginn eines erbarmungslosen Kolonialkrieges, den das Deutsche Kaiserreich gegen aufständische Hereros und Hottentotten führt. An der Spitze der für ihre Freiheit kämpfenden Schwarzen steht Jakob Morenga, ein früherer Minenarbeiter. Was damals in dem heute unabhängigen Namibia geschah, hat Uwe Timm in einer geschickten Montage von historischen Dokumenten und fiktiven Aufzeichnungen zu einem grandiosen historischen Roman verdichtet.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This historical novel by Timm (Headhunter), first published in Germany in 1978, is an oddly fragmented montage that offers a compelling view of the title figure, a charismatic black South-West African who led the Hottentot and Herero uprising against the Germans after the Boer War. The initial protagonist is a fictional German military veterinarian named Gottschalk, who arrives in German-occupied South-West Africa in October 1904. The early chapters concern the mysterious fate of a colleague who disappears from Gottschalk's unit. From there, Timm turns to the uprising itself, his depiction of Morenga's role broken up by snapshots of secondary characters. Especially memorable are a demented trader named Kl gge and a gadget-obsessed engineer named Treptow. Their adventures eventually reach a narrative dead end, though there are moments of suspense and subtle humor ("It would be years... before would earn the necessary capital for his more grandiose plans. This was due in part to the poverty of the population, but also to a certain characteristic tightfistedness and a corresponding cleverness in which Kl gge felt he recognized something Jewish, which was not so surprising, since after all the Hottentots were Semitic in origin, as a Swedish professor... had explained to him"). The prismatic view of many ethnic, factional and moral conflicts illustrate how even supposed allies were divided from one another in this land. Though the parts never quite coalesce, the well-developed historical material and Timm's gifts as a portraitist make this an intriguing and sometimes fascinating read.