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Atlas Of Remote Islands (2009)

by Judith Schalansky(Favorite Author)
4.22 of 5 Votes: 3
ISBN
014311820X (ISBN13: 9780143118206)
languge
English
publisher
Penguin Books
review 1: Bei einem Format von knapp 12x17cm kann der Begriff Taschenatlas wörtlich genommen werden. Judith Schalansky, inzwischen bekannt für ihre sorgfältig editierten Bücher, versammelt hier in einheitlichem Maßstab 50 Inseln, von denen einige besonders Lesern bekannt sein dürften. Zu jeder Insel gibt es Bezeichnungen in verschiedenen Sprachen, Größe, Einwohnerzahl, Entfernung zu den nächsten Nachbarn, auf einem Zeitstrahl das Jahr ihrer Entdeckung und wozu die Insel ihren Entdeckern einmal diente. Auf Inseln wurden Militärbasen, Wetterstationen, Sträflingskolonien und Walfangstationen eingerichtet, manche dienten dem Abbau von Guano. Auch als Zankapfel in kriegerischen Auseinandersetzungen, als Fundorte von Wracks und Skeletten oder Schauplatz von Orkanen und Vulkanau... moresbrüchen bestimmten Inseln die Nachrichten. Iwojima ist uns aus dem Geschichtsunterricht vertraut, Diego Garcia aus den Nachrichten, Floreana, Pitcairn, Juan Fernandez oder die Franklin Insel sind Schauplätze von Romanen. Pingelap machte Oliver Sacks mit seinem Buch über die Farbenblindheit bekannt.Mit Ausnahme des schwer leserlichen Orange als zweite Druckfarbe bietet der erschwingliche Taschenatlas gerade Roman-Lesern interessante historische und geografische Einblicke.
review 2: This is one of those books that succeeds by leaving things out. Schalansky does something really skillful here: rather than satiating all curiosity about these 50 islands, in an encyclopedic/almanaic fashion, she instead writes these lovely, impressionistic glimpses of these remote islands -- their natural and (usually brief) social histories, individual stories of forgotten explorers, mysteries. The narratives that accompanied the each of the islands did what the best short stories do: intimate, and leave most questions unresolved. It's also lonely. The islands, the book. Schalansky reminds you in many (most, really) of the narratives that an island can be as much a hell as it can be a paradise. Remoteness may seem like a succor to the craziness of everyday life, but it's also as much an insanity, too. She's a talented writer (and has a good translator, I'd imagine), and her book is aided by her lifelong love of maps and a keen sense for minimal graphic design. An atlas is certainly a form, one often filled with facts and demographic/geographic tidbits, glossy photos and/or very detailed maps, all following a more or less standard list of topics for each entry. I'm glad Schalansky took an unconventional route for writing an "atlas" and created this curious, strange little book that leaves so much to keep wondering and asking questions about. (As many others have said in their reviews, you definitely should have internet at hand while reading this... you'll want to look up every single one right after you've read the passage. But, I see this as a strength of the book -- that the small narratives contain multitudes, keep you asking questions about places you'd never considered -- and not a limitation, as others have noted. More time on Google Maps is never a bad thing!) less
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amy94
"Every map is the result and the exercise of colonial violence."
Joy
I love this kind of stuff!
Allie
maravilla
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