An edition of Deutschstunde (1968)

German Lesson

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Last edited by MARC Bot
October 6, 2025 | History
An edition of Deutschstunde (1968)

German Lesson

  • 9 Want to read
  • 1 Currently reading
  • 2 Have read

Siggi Jepsen, incarcerated as a juvenile delinquent, in one day assigned to write a routine German lesson on the 'The Joys of Duty.'Overfamiliar with these 'joys, ' Siggi sets down his life since 1943, a decade earlier, when as a boy he watched his father, constable of the northernmost police station in Germany, doggedly carry out orders from Berlin to stop a well-known Expressionist, their neighbor, from paintings to keep them safe from his father.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
476

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Previews available in: Chinese

Edition Availability
Cover of: De yu ke
De yu ke
2007, Yuan liu chu ban shi ye gu fen you xian gong si
in Chinese - Chu ban
Cover of: Deutschstunde.
Deutschstunde.
January 1, 2001, Hoffmann & Campe
Hardcover
Cover of: German Lesson
German Lesson
April 1, 1986, New Directions Publishing Corporation
Paperback in English

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
, PT2623.E583 D413 1986

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
476
Dimensions
8 x 5 x 1.3 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL7999878M
ISBN 10
0811209822
ISBN 13
9780811209823
LCCN
77163567
OCLC/WorldCat
23251062
LibraryThing
466170
Goodreads
287505

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL987013W

Work Description

Siggi Jepsen (the first-person narrator), an inmate of a juvenile detention center, is forced to write an essay with the title "The Joy of Duty." In the essay, Siggi describes his youth in Nazi Germany where his father, the "most northerly police officer in Germany," does his duty, even when he is ordered to debar his old childhood friend, the expressionist painter Max Nansen, from his profession, because the Nazis banned expressionism as "degenerate art" (entartete Kunst).

Siggi, however, is fascinated by Nansen's paintings, "the green faces, the Mongol eyes, these deformed bodies ... " and, without the knowledge of his father, manages to hide some of the confiscated paintings. Following the end of World War II, Jepsen senior is interned for a short time and later reinstalled as a policeman in rural Schleswig-Holstein. When he then obsessively continues to carry out his former orders, Siggi brings Nansen paintings that he believes to be in danger to safety. His father discovers his doings and dutifully turns him in for art theft.

When forced to write the essay on "The Joy of Duty" during his term in the juvenile detention center near Hamburg, the memories of his childhood come to the surface and he goes far beyond the "duty" of writing his essay by filling several notebooks with caustic recollections of this entire saga. - Wikipedia

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