David Farrell Krell 
A Black Forest Walden [EPUB ebook] 
Conversations with Henry David Thoreau and Marlonbrando

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Finalist for the 2022 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Award in the Essay Category




A Black Forest Walden is a work of philosophical reflection, nature description, and sly humor. In brief chapters, or aphorisms, the American philosopher David Farrell Krell recounts his experiences in a cabin located in the mountains of southern Germany’s Black Forest, where he has lived for several decades. Insofar as Krell compares his experiences with those of Henry David Thoreau, who serves as both inspiration and irritation, the book could be described as a critical commentary on Thoreau’s
Walden. Yet it equally reads as a rigorous yet playful and profoundly literary manifestation of where and how the mind wanders. Hence, the ‘Marlonbrando’ of the subtitle is not the late actor but a feral cat who frequents the cabin and comes to be an important interlocutor, as if playing the role of analyst to the author. The subjects Krell treats are wide-ranging: the changing seasons, environmental issues, romantic love, parent-child relations, European versus American ‘values, ‘ higher education, artistic creativity, solitude, and the contrast between lifestyles in a quiet Black Forest village and in a noisy contemporary United States. Forty-one black-and-white photographs taken by the author accompany and enliven the text.
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Preface



1. Silent snowfall



2. The colors of snow; or, where beauty is



3. In the still of the night



4. The snowplow



5. Ice wings



6. The Storm Beech



7. The Moon and Venus



8. The cabin; or, plucking the raisins



9. The past has not passed



10. Neighbors



11. But where’s the pond?



12. River of fog



13. My ‘office’



14. Conversations with Marlon Brando?



15. Ice wings, Part Two



16. Douglas the Fir



17. Aurora



18. Freaks of nature; or, lighting fires and mourning the woods



19. H.D. in bed



20. Maudlin and bathetic



21. Add your dreams, and not just the sexy ones!



22. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right



23. Neighbors, Part Two: Herr S.W.



24. The darkness of the woods



25. Monarchs in December



26. The limits of description



27. The limits of knowledge



28. Black and white



29. Fool’s spring



30. A reflection on consumer society; or, a Romantic has his uses



31. The deserving poor



32. A succession of beautiful days



33. Neighbors, Part Three: Wolfgang



34. La pensée du jour



35. The smartphone in high mountains



36. The new adventures of Pinocchio



37. News of the world



38. On the difference between European and American ‘values’



39. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Two



40. On the degeneration of poetry to chemistry



41. Platonism and Puritanism keep us on our spiritual toes



42. Neighbors, Part Four: Frau S.M.



43. Let’s (
not!) do lunch



44. The perfect universe



45. Autarchy; or, fatties beware!



46. Woodchuck Heaven



47. Mudslide Man



48. Knowing beans



49. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Three



50. Moving mountains



51. Obscene spring



52. On jealousy and brutalization



53. The bowlegged larch



54. Speculative gardening



55. Former inhabitants



56. The two corners of Melville’s smile



57. Thaw and Thor



58. Former inhabitants, Part Two



59. Taking the arm of an elm tree



60. Thoreau’s serviceable body



61. On loneliness; or, snap out of it!



62. The work of mourning



63. A cautionary note



64. Hurry up, please, it’s time



65. Return to sender



66. Former inhabitants, Part Three



67. A snippet on schnapps



68. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Four



69. Doubling up



70. My little chickadee!



71. Home Entertainment Center



72. Neighbors, Part Five: Rüdiger



73. The forlorn pair of shoes



74. The forlorn BMW



75. Kids



76. Henry’s mom and dad



77. More work of mourning



78. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Five



79. Old people



80. About that blackbird



81. Former inhabitants, Part Four: The lover suspended in the rafters



82. On doing good



83. Organized religion



84. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Six



85. Living in the present



86. Out of doors



87. Bronchitis? Pneumonia?



88. Day, season, and year



89. The bloody truth about trees



90. The head monkey at Paris



91. On the gift-giving vice



92. Losing the whole world



93. Knowing when to break up



94. Accentuate the negative



95. Prejudice



96. How to become just friends



97. Faithless fidelity



98. Advice to the lovelorn



99. Books



100. Former inhabitants . . . of color . . . at Walden Pond



101. Crooked genius, crooked rules



102. Art is not yet weaned



103. Life is not yet weaned



104. Problematic praxis



105. The Copernican Revolution?



106. New beech leaves



107. God bless the American
Igel; or, true patriotism



108. One more angel story, the last one, I promise



109. Creationism



110. Capital punishment



111. May fog



112. Thoreau’s model farm



113. The water works



114. There is nothing inorganic



115. The ashes of once living things



116. The katzenjammer of birds



117. The wolf spider



118. A morning hike



119. Music of the rain



120. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Seven



121. Save your hay



122. A day’s journey



123. Dream and catastrophe; or, the politics of archaeology



124. And then the sky fell



125. Still more work



126. Life stammers on



127. Pinions



128. The logic of error; or, a modest disquisition on the synthesis of being, time, and truth



129. Tell Marlonbrando your dreams, honey, and everything will be all right, Part Eight and Last



130. Cabin smells



131. Desperately sad



132. Self-confidence



133. Polonius



134. Sea of fog



135. Sunworshiper fog



136. Weather can be extraordinarily precise



137. The man in the moon



138. Breaking News: Marlonbrando confesses all!



139. Extra-vagance



140. September mood



141. Periwinkle and ivy



142. To see and say it all



143. Marlonbrando sees the light



144. The power of the past tense



145. From the mountains of Saint Ulrich to the prairies of Chicagoland?



146. Life is at bottom indestructibly powerful and pleasurable



Notes

List of Illustrations

Despre autor

David Farrell Krell is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at De Paul University and Brauer Distinguished Visiting Professor at Brown University. His many books include
The Cudgel and the Caress: Reflections on Cruelty and Tenderness, also published by SUNY Press.
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Limba Engleză ● Format EPUB ● Pagini 294 ● ISBN 9781438488509 ● Mărime fișier 10.7 MB ● Editura State University of New York Press ● Publicat 2022 ● Descărcabil 24 luni ● Valută EUR ● ID 8202346 ● Protecție împotriva copiilor Adobe DRM
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