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Pictures at an Exhibition
  

Pictures at an Exhibition (Paperback)

de D.M. Thomas (Author)
3.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)
Price: CDN$ 10.60 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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From Publishers Weekly

Thomas's new novel is a return to the fascination with the horrors of war and the labyrinths of psychoanalysis that informed his bestselling The White Hotel , and has some of that novel's mesmerizing power. It begins with a young Jewish Czech inmate of Auschwitz, Galewski, who has some rudimentary knowledge of psychotherapy, trying it on one of the camp's Nazi doctors, Dr. Lorenz, who is tormented by headaches; the countless deaths and unending human agonies that surround them both come to seem like a mundane background to their hauntingly strange relationship. Most of the rest of the book takes place in Britain 40 years later during Margaret Thatcher's tenure, centering around the relationships of a celebrated elderly analyst (can it be Galewski?) with some of his patients and pupils who, as a group, tellingly represent the contemporary English intelligentsia. As is often the case in Thomas's work, art and music play an important role-- here, the paintings of Edvard Munch and the music of Gustav Mahler are prominent. There is an enigmatic visitor from Syria (can it be Dr. Lorenz?), a hideous but offstage act of terrorism, a fascinating interweave of lives, memories and motives. There is sometimes confusion about who is speaking, and the machinery of monologues and letters that moves the narrative forward (and, often, sideways and backwards) sometimes clanks a little. But there is no mistaking the stark compassion of Thomas's world, his mastery of the modern psyche and his ability to draw the reader into the darker corners of the human heart.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.


From Library Journal

Organized around an exhibition of Edvard Munch paintings portraying love, jealousy, despair, and death, Thomas's novel is a stunning commentary on the effects of the Holocaust on society today. The opening chapter is a harrowing portrait of Auschwitz, as Dr. Galewski, a young Jewish inmate, analyzes Dr. Lorenz, a Nazi who suffers from headaches and nightmares. With his love for family and music, Lorenz seems almost sympathetic, while Galewski is morally corrupted by his participation in a perverted sexual experiment involving Judith, a Jewish girl he had saved from death. The setting then changes to London 50 years later and revolves around elderly Jewish psychoanalyst Oscar Jacobson and his wife, Myra, an Auschwitz survivor. The reader initially assumes that Oscar and Myra are really Galewski and Judith, but as their stories are tantalizingly revealed, each character's identity becomes suspect. Thomas, best known for The White Hotel ( LJ 2/1/81), has written a highly complex, ambitious, and brilliant novel that touches on the morality of abortion, fetal tissue research, and euthanasia, as well as the genocide of the Holocaust. Essential.
- Patricia Ross, Westerville P.L., Ohio
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 (2 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Read it again, this time more carefully...., Mars 13 2001
Par menachem feuer (Toronto, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
After reading this book, I was curious as to how other people received it. I remember the problems many people had with the White Hotel and I wondered if similar issues or concerns would be repeated again. The first reveiw I read was from Kirkus Reviews. They hacked the book into pieces and, unfortunately, didn't understand it. The sole review of this book for Amazon was also hasty and spiteful. I suggest that the reviewers re-read the book and take into considration how D.M. Thomas juxaposes art, psychoanalyisis, and the empty dramas of everyday life to history. These juxtapositons have the affect of emptying out the over importance we give to our daily troubles, accidents, and deaths, as well as the art that we exalt to represnt them. This indeed is the pastiche that Kirkus Reviews points out. However, this pastiche is not a matter of circumastance or evidence that this is a "trashy novel" (as Kirkus reviews argues) it is the pastiche that emerges against the unthinkable historical "event' called the Holocaust. (I suggest they read Fredric Jameson's reading of "pastiche" vs- "parody" in his book Postmodernism or the cultural logic of late capitalism p. 16-18). Furthermore, Thomas brings out, through his brilliant juxtapositons, the failure and perhaps death of psychoanalysis, a death that people have yet to mourn with the other inventions of humanism and modernity, inventions that are obsessed with totality, with explaining, humanising, and "demysitfying" everything including death (but not including senseless mass murder). J.F. Lyotard likens the Holocaust to an earthquake that shatters all instruments that try to measure it (psychoanalysis and humanism included). Of all the books I have read on the Holocaust, I have to say that this is one of the best. It stands amongst books like See: Under Love. The Painted Bird, Survival in Auscwitz, The Messiah of Stockholm and Maus I and II. I have taught these books in the universtiy and if I were to teach a class on the Holocasut again, I would include this title as well. D.M. thomas asks us, as the above authors do, to take seriously the fact that any writing that approaches the holocaust must articulate the tension between history and art and the limits of representation. In the PostModern world, Pastiche is one way of marking these limits. To miss this, as these reveiwers have, shows a lack of understanding the challenges that art and fiction face after the Holocaust.
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1.0étoiles sur 5 DM Thomas should get a real job/ 0 stars, Mars 26 2000
I hated this book almost as much as I disliked The White Hotel. The holocaust is used as a thematic device for Thomas to twist; there is no empathy here for concentration camp victims. Indeed, his main character -- in the guise of a jewish camp doctor (psychiatrist) in the first part of the book -- hates his jewish peers. By the tilt of Thomas's pen, this doctor comes to "treat" the bad dreams and visceral discomforts of the camp commander; he cures him so that the camp commander can continue the killing mission of the camp without discomfort.

There is an abrupt transition after about a third of the book; no longer in Nazi Germany, the scene changes to England after the war. The cast of characters however, does not really change. Instead, Thomas cleverly disguises their identities. Now, the concentration camp commandant is a prominent, ailing psychoanalyst. The trick of the book is to figure out/pair the war-time identities with the postwar characters that flitter in and out of scenes with the ailing shrink. But the characters are despicable; so really, who cares.

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