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Quotomania
dublab & Onassis LA
365 episodes
13 hours ago
"When I was very young my Mother used to say to me: "We have two ears and one mouth." Unwittingly perhaps she was quoting the Greek philosopher Zeno of Elea. As a quotomaniac by profession, I believe with Michel de Montaigne that "I only quote others to better express myself." “Quotomania” is hosted by Paul Holdengräber. LISTEN IN: Daily quotations from your favorite quotomaniac delivered directly into your ear.
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"When I was very young my Mother used to say to me: "We have two ears and one mouth." Unwittingly perhaps she was quoting the Greek philosopher Zeno of Elea. As a quotomaniac by profession, I believe with Michel de Montaigne that "I only quote others to better express myself." “Quotomania” is hosted by Paul Holdengräber. LISTEN IN: Daily quotations from your favorite quotomaniac delivered directly into your ear.
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QUOTOMANIA 349: Thomas Bernhard
Quotomania
2 minutes 26 seconds
2 years ago
QUOTOMANIA 349: Thomas Bernhard

Today’s Quotation is care of Thomas Bernhard. Listen in! Subscribe to Quotomania on quotomania.com or search for Quotomania on your favorite podcast app!

Thomas Bernhard, (born Feb. 9/10, 1931, Cloister Heerland, Neth.—died Feb. 12, 1989, Gmunden, Austria), was an Austrian writer who explored death, social injustice, and human misery in controversial literature that was deeply pessimistic about modern civilization in general and Austrian culture in particular. Bernhard was born in a Holland convent; his mother, unwed at the time, had fled there from Austria to give birth. After a year, she returned to her parents in Vienna, where her father, writer Johannes Freumbichler (1881–1949), became the major influence on Bernhard. After surviving a life-threatening coma and repeated hospitalizations (1948–51) in tuberculosis sanatoriums, he studied music and drama in Salzburg and Vienna.

Bernhard achieved little success with several collections of poetry in the late 1950s, but in 1963 he gained notoriety with his first novel, Frost (Eng. trans. Frost). In such novels as Verstörung (1967; “Derangement,” Eng. trans. Gargoyles), Das Kalkwerk (1970; The Lime Works), and Korrektur (1975; Corrections), he combined complex narrative structure with an increasingly misanthropic philosophy. In 1973 Bernhard withdrew his drama Die Berühmten (“The Famous”) from the prestigious Salzburg Festival because of a controversy over staging. After its publication in 1984 his novel Holzfällen(Woodcutters, or Cutting Timber: An Irritation) was seized by police for allegedly criticizing a public figure. Even before its premiere in November 1988, Bernhard’s last play, Heldenplatz(“Heroes’ Square”), a bleak indictment of anti-Semitism in contemporary Austria, provoked violent protests. His other plays include Ein Fest für Boris (1968; A Party for Boris), Die Jagdgesellschaft (1974; The Hunting Party), Die Macht der Gewohnheit (1974; The Force of Habit), and  Der Schein trügt(1983; Appearances Are Deceiving). Bernhard’s memoirs were translated in Gathering Evidence(1985), a compilation of five German works published between 1975 and 1982.

From https://www.britannica.com/biography/Thomas-Bernhard.

For more information about Thomas Bernhard:

Concrete: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/12747/concrete-by-thomas-bernhard/

“The Art of Extinction: The bleak laughter of Thomas Bernhard”: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2006/12/25/the-art-of-extinction

“Between the Rare Oases of Thought: On Thomas Bernhard and the Mind”: https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/rare-oases-thought-thomas-bernhard-mind/

“Thomas Bernhard is Dead at 58”: https://www.nytimes.com/1989/02/17/obituaries/thomas-bernhard-is-dead-at-58-his-last-play-enraged-austrians.html

Quotomania
"When I was very young my Mother used to say to me: "We have two ears and one mouth." Unwittingly perhaps she was quoting the Greek philosopher Zeno of Elea. As a quotomaniac by profession, I believe with Michel de Montaigne that "I only quote others to better express myself." “Quotomania” is hosted by Paul Holdengräber. LISTEN IN: Daily quotations from your favorite quotomaniac delivered directly into your ear.