Category Archives: Document

Kalifornienträumen: Bertolt Brecht’s Los Angeles Poems

The Los Angeles arts journal East of Borneo published this great article about Bertolt Brecht’s poetry written while he lived in LA during the 40s. Certainly worth a read if you’re interested in the poetic history of the city.

“Los Angeles has long been an urban dialectic par excellence, with its discordant melodies and apparent contradictions; its extreme polarities of nature, of culture, of economics, of politics. The metaphors come easily—the tropical flower abloom in a desert basin, the city of illusions, etc.—and Bertolt Brecht employed them acidly and exactingly in the poems he wrote during his LA exile in the 1940s. Indeed, at no time, perhaps, was the city’s surreal admixture of improbable light and equally improbable darkness (sunshine and noir, in other words) more startling than during that very time, the thirties and forties, when hundreds, perhaps thousands of Weimar-era German-speaking exiles (Brecht, Theodor Adorno, Alfred Döblin, Fritz Lang, Peter Lorre, brothers Thomas and Heinrich Mann, Arnold Schoenberg and Salka Viertel, among them) fled the killing fields of World War II Europe and found themselves in a city of angels nestled along the cerulean pool of the Pacific.”

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Kalifornienträumen: Bertolt Brecht’s Los Angeles Poems and Other Sunstruck Germanic Specters (East of Borneo).

Jacquelyn Ardam on Gertrude Stein

Our very first M/ELT presenter was UCLA graduate student Jacquelyn Ardam who went on to publish her paper, ”Too Old for Children and Too Young for Grown-ups”: Gertrude Stein’s To Do: A Book of Alphabets and Birthdays,  in the journal Modernism/modernity.

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Unfortunately, it’s behind a firewall (academic subscribers can get access to it through ProjectMUSE where an excerpt is available to non-subscribers). I’m sure we can find a way to get you this if you are really interested.