Go went Gone

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A novel by Jenny Erpenbeck , who was shortlisted for the German Book Prize in 2015 and, in English translation, on the long list for the Man Booker International Prize (GB) in 2018 , went, went, gone .

content

Richard, who recently retired as professor of classical languages, lives alone. His wife died five years ago and his younger lover left him. He can live well on his pension and lives in a house near Berlin that he bought after the fall of the Berlin Wall. In the summer, someone drowned in the lake that borders the property.

Ten male refugees from African countries are going on a hunger strike on Alexanderplatz . They refuse to give their names. Richard becomes aware of the problem through a report on the evening news and begins to find out more about the situation of the protesters. He realizes that they, like him, suffer from the ban on work. As a result of inactivity, they too are forced to deal exclusively with themselves and their memories, which are often very painful. He decides to do some research about it and starts talking to them. He first meets them on Oranienplatz , where they had set up a protest camp over two years to draw attention to the shortcomings of European asylum policy. As part of an "agreement" with the Berlin Senate, they were soon accommodated in various accommodations (called "home" in the novel), only to be returned to Italy, their country of first reception, a few months later, after "examining the individual cases". Before they came to Germany, however, they had tried in vain to find work there.

Richard accompanies the refugees with his research through all these different phases for about a year. In his notes, he initially referred to some of the men by names from Greek and German mythology ("Apoll", "Tristan"), who sounded more familiar to him than their African names because of his job, and he later named the others by their real first names (" Ali "," Karon "," Osarobo "," Rashid "," Rufu "). In the course of the conversations he has with the African men, Richard becomes involved in their everyday lives, accompanies them to appointments with lawyers and to language courses, translates official letters for them, procures them small part-time jobs, and gives them German lessons themselves. He teaches one of them the basics of playing the piano, and invites another to his house for Christmas.

While he learns more and more about the life of African men, he informs himself at the same time through reading and internet research about geographical and political backgrounds and the causes of flight in their West African countries of origin.

After all, he becomes politically active himself, as he reports for a demonstration for the first time in his life, experiences evictions and conflicts between the refugees and authorities and the Berlin police. In order to enable the family of a Ghanaian to survive in Ghana, he buys a piece of land in Ghana for 3000 euros. A break-in into his home becomes an occasion for him and his friends to make fundamental considerations about their own prejudices, trust, and private property.

After most of the Oranienplatz activists with whom Richard is in contact were put on the street, he and his friends take some of the refugees into their civic environment or at least give them a place to sleep in offices and shops.

At the end of the book, when Richard invites the Africans to his birthday party in the garden, the loneliness they all share comes up for the first time. While the young men remember the time in their lives when they were still involved in everyday family life and loving relationships, the widowed Richard openly talks about the mistakes he made during his marriage. "At that time (...) it became clear to me that what I can endure is only the surface of everything that I cannot endure." The refugee men understand him - because that's how it was for them on the crossing from Libya to Europe: They saved themselves on light boats, but the fear of the deep, unfathomable sea stayed with them all the time.

Overview and content of the chapters

expenditure

Reviews (selection)

Literary contributions

  • Maria Behre: "GIVE US A PLACE" - Becoming political on Oranienplatz . Jenny Erpenbeck's novel “Go, went, gone” (2015), read with Hannah Arendt's political philosophy. In: Journal for Didactics of Philosophy and Ethics . Volume 39, Issue 1: Hannah Arendt . Siebert-Verlag, 2017, ISSN  0945-6295 , p. 58-65 .

To the reception

"The fact that Erpenbeck's book was not awarded the German Book Prize despite being a favorite is also due to the jury's reluctance to put such a controversial topic at the center of literary life for one season," said Andreas Platthaus in the Frankfurter Allgemeine .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Andreas Platthaus : Be political! And it can do it: How literature improves the world , in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , October 19, 2015, p. 9