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The Song of the World by Jean Giono, a novel which examines nature and man’s place in it. The novel recounts the quest of Antonio and Sailor, two friends, to find Sailor’s missing son. It turns out that he has gone off with a girl from a nearby clan, which sets off a wave of events that will have life-changing consequences for all those involved.
The Song of the World was released in 1934 and was heavily inspired by Walt Whitman’s poetry and the
Iliad. Jean Giono was a French author whose writings are tinged with a profound sense of humanism. His experience in the army, and the accusations of collaboration with the Nazis that were later levelled against him, had a marked influence on his later works. As a result, many of his books concern war and nature. He died in 1970.
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Seitenzahl: 21
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017
Jean Giono was a French writer and director who was born in Manosque in 1895. He was called up for military service in 1914, and the scenes he witnessed in the war turned him into a staunch pacifist, to such an extent that he was imprisoned in 1939 for writing pacifist texts. He was then wrongly accused of collaboration with the Nazis in 1945, which led to a certain darkness in his later works. He died in 1970.
His works are characterised by a profound sense of humanism, the veneration of nature and rural life, and a focus on war, and put both man and nature in turn at the heart of their reflections. He is the author of Hills of Destiny (1929), To the Slaughterhouse (1931), The Song of the World (1934), Joy of Man’s Desiring (1936) and The Horseman on the Roof (1951).
Published in 1934, The Song of the World is the first Jean Giono book which is set in the mountains. It recounts the quest of Antonio, a fisherman by birth, who accompanies his friend Sailor to find the man’s lost son. The Song of The World is told by an unknown narrator and paints the portrait of valiant, humble men, whose epic journey could rival a Greek myth. However, nature is the real hero of the book, as the author himself wrote in an article in 1932: “For a very long time I have wanted to write a novel in which you could hear the world sing.”