German Autumn
Stig Dagerman Β· 1947
About this book
Dagerman's reportage from the ruins of postwar Germany, written when he was just twenty-three, is one of the most powerful pieces of literary journalism in Scandinavian literature. His empathetic portraits of ordinary Germans amid the rubble challenged Swedish moral certainties about neutrality and guilt. The book reveals the existential crisis that Swedish neutrality during World War II paradoxically produced, and established Dagerman as the voice of the Swedish postwar generation.
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