Parametri
- 139pagine
- 5 ore di lettura
Maggiori informazioni sul libro
The late 1960s were a time for student rebellion, and there were varying degrees to which the protestors took their message. One of the most notorious groups of student rebels was known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang, a collective led by Andreas Baader that had as its goal one thing: civil war within Germany. Over the next 30 years the group went on a spree that cost more than 30 lives; last April, it put out a press release that said the group had dissolved. Baader Meinhof: Pictures on the Run 67-77 documents the first ten years of the group as seen through the eyes of Astrid Proll. Proll was a student in 1967, when she became acquainted with Baader. Over the next ten years, she took pictures of her colleagues' exploits; those are on display in the book, along with Proll's look back at the years when she and her colleagues "overestimated [them]selves ridiculously...indulging in the illusion that a revolution was thinkable." These photographs show radicalism at its most violent and, ultimately, deadly.
Acquisto del libro
Hans und Grete, Astrid Proll
- Lingua
- Pubblicato
- 1998
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Copertina rigida)
Metodi di pagamento
Qui potrebbe esserci la tua recensione.
- Titolo
- Hans und Grete
- Lingua
- Inglese
- Autori
- Astrid Proll
- Editore
- Steidl
- Pubblicato
- 1998
- Formato
- Copertina rigida
- Pagine
- 139
- ISBN10
- 3882435623
- ISBN13
- 9783882435627
- Serie
- Tag
- Saggistica, Arte / Cultura, Scienze sociali, Tema stórico, Storia, Scienze politiche & Politica, Arte, Politica, Letteratura tedesca, Fotografia, Storia Militare, Terrorismo, RAF - Forza Aerea Britannica
- Valutazione
- 3,8 su 5
- Descrizione
- The late 1960s were a time for student rebellion, and there were varying degrees to which the protestors took their message. One of the most notorious groups of student rebels was known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang, a collective led by Andreas Baader that had as its goal one thing: civil war within Germany. Over the next 30 years the group went on a spree that cost more than 30 lives; last April, it put out a press release that said the group had dissolved. Baader Meinhof: Pictures on the Run 67-77 documents the first ten years of the group as seen through the eyes of Astrid Proll. Proll was a student in 1967, when she became acquainted with Baader. Over the next ten years, she took pictures of her colleagues' exploits; those are on display in the book, along with Proll's look back at the years when she and her colleagues "overestimated [them]selves ridiculously...indulging in the illusion that a revolution was thinkable." These photographs show radicalism at its most violent and, ultimately, deadly.




