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{FREE} the Seven Addictions and Five Professions of Anita Berber: Weimar Berlins Priestess of Decadence Ebook, Epub THE SEVEN ADDICTIONS AND FIVE PROFESSIONS OF ANITA BERBER: WEIMAR BERLINS PRIESTESS OF DECADENCE PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Mel Gordon | 260 pages | 08 Jun 2006 | Feral House,U.S. | 9781932595123 | English | Los Angeles, United States Libros de Mel Gordon Scarica Libri PDF ePub The fact that I'm keeping this book is a reflection of the fact that it contains a generous helping of photographs, many of which I'd never before seen. It is also as far as I'm aware the only book about Berber available in English. Thus: one star for the photos, one star simply for existing. Somebody, please, put me out of my misery and write a half-decent biography of Berber!!! Although the life of the notorious Weimar Berlin dancer Anita Berber is full of enough drama, eroticism, depravity and conflict to fill a dozen books, Mr. Gordon's treatment is oddly flat, even sterile. The facts are all there, but none of the emotion. Sadly, this book did not engage this reader. Here at Walmart. Your email address will never be sold or distributed to a third party for any reason. Sorry, but we can't respond to individual comments. If you need immediate assistance, please contact Customer Care. Your feedback helps us make Walmart shopping better for millions of customers. Recent searches Clear All. Enter Location. Update location. Learn more. Report incorrect product information. Mel Gordon. Walmart Book Format. Select Option. Current selection is: Paperback. Free delivery Arrives by Wednesday, Nov 4. Pickup not available. Add to list. Add to registry. A contemporary biography of a notorious actress, dancer, and playwright who scandalized sex-obsessed Berlin during the s chronicles the life of Anita Berber, who often haunted hotel lobbies, nightclubs and casinos, radiantly naked except for an elegant sable wrap, a pet monkey hanging from her neck, and a silver brooch packed with cocaine. About This Item. We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. See our disclaimer. Specifications Publisher Feral House. Write a review See all reviews Write a review. Average Rating: 3. December 12, See more. Reviewed by RussellBittner RussellBittner. Written by a librarything. Average Rating: 2. February 18, Reviewed by startingover startingover. April 29, Reviewed by Laurenbdavis Laurenbdavis. Ask a question Ask a question If you would like to share feedback with us about pricing, delivery or other customer service issues, please contact customer service directly. Your question required. The height of Berber's career and nude dancing coincided with the Inflation, and the author depicts this period primarily by its natural, hedonistic response to war and economic distress, although Gordon doesn't dwell on it. Surprisingly, no mention is made of the noteworthy takeover of the country by soldier and worker councils following the war. Gordon prefers to remain close to his subject, the schoolgirl raised by her grandmother in Dresden where she attended body movement schools before moving to the capital at age 16 to become a dancer. Gordon knows from his encyclopedic Voluptuous Panic , now in an expanded edition, precisely where Berber fits in the erotic world of Weimar Berlin, and he fills in the background with plenty of interesting oddities, such as showgirls sliding down a giant razor blade. Seen as a morality tale for the era, Gordon reports that Berber died from tuberculosis at 29 after a tour of Greece and the Middle East. But the author is clearly fascinated by Berber and sympathizes with her, especially when she was paid to do more than dance. It seems that Gordon himself was caught up in the s Berber revival, in which her dances were recreated in several cities. The author even helped choreograph her moves for a new wave musician. Gordon makes the point that Berber's career was buoyed at various points by the graphic arts and her appearances in magazines. The best photographs show elegantly long, tapering legs with a narrow waist and slender shoulders -- the body of a professional dancer. In movie stills she appears in an Eton-Boy tux with trousers, sporting a monocle; or again shooting an older man, possibly her father, with a pistol. Otto Dix captured her in wearing the tomato-red "Morphine" costume in a painting recently on exhibit at the "Glitter and Doom: German Portraits from the s" show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and nicely reproduced in the book. The semitransparent cloth clings to a long waist at the center of the painting. Dix hints at the muscles of her abdomen, her belly button and a small band of fat below it -- all very smooth in contrast to the diagonal folds of the skirt and the rise of her breasts. One hand presses against her hip. The other curls toward her private parts, seen as a faintly dark triangle, with the fingers hovering like red-tipped pincers. Dix contrasts the high-collar dress blending into her auburn hair and the crimson background with Berber's powder-white face and large eyes. She wears a fierce expression in the portrait that was turned into a national postage stamp in -- an expression at once determined with her glassy eyes staring at a point in the distance, yet whimsical with ornately colored lips. That's how she looked when she danced to the words in the poem "Morphine," which is reproduced with others in the back of the biography: "strange flowers and greenhouse plants, painted people and listless sounding bells. It was with Droste that Berber created some of her biggest scandals on the stage and in crime stories in newspapers across Europe. The Seven Addictions and Five Professions of Anita Berber Shoreline Library is closed for construction. The book drop and curbside pickup are closed. Find out what to expect during the closure. Need to return items? Find book return locations and hours. Rate this:. In an era where everything was permitted, Anita Berber's celebrations of "Depravity, Horror and Ecstasy" were condemned and censored. Berber's wicked, visionary dances inspired the careers of Marlene Dietrich and Leni Riefenstahl. The multitalented Anita saw no boundaries between her personal life and her taboo-shattering performances. As such, she was Europe's first postmodern woman. The Seven Addictions and Five Professions of Anita Berber chronicles a remarkable career, including dozens of photographs and drawings that recreate Anita's "Repertoire of the Damned. ISBN: pbk. Characteristics: iv, p. Alternative Title: 7 additions and 5 professions of Anita Berber. From the critics. Comment Add a Comment. Age Add Age Suitability. Summary Add a Summary. Notices Add Notices. Quotes Add a Quote. The facts are all there, but none of the emotion. Sadly, this book did not engage this reader. Here at Walmart. Your email address will never be sold or distributed to a third party for any reason. Sorry, but we can't respond to individual comments. If you need immediate assistance, please contact Customer Care. Your feedback helps us make Walmart shopping better for millions of customers. Recent searches Clear All. Enter Location. Update location. Learn more. Report incorrect product information. Mel Gordon. Walmart Book Format. Select Option. Current selection is: Paperback. Free delivery Arrives by Wednesday, Nov 4. Pickup not available. Add to list. Add to registry. A contemporary biography of a notorious actress, dancer, and playwright who scandalized sex-obsessed Berlin during the s chronicles the life of Anita Berber, who often haunted hotel lobbies, nightclubs and casinos, radiantly naked except for an elegant sable wrap, a pet monkey hanging from her neck, and a silver brooch packed with cocaine. About This Item. We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. See our disclaimer. Specifications Publisher Feral House. Write a review See all reviews Write a review. Average Rating: 3. December 12, See more. Reviewed by RussellBittner RussellBittner. Written by a librarything. Average Rating: 2. February 18, Reviewed by startingover startingover. April 29, Reviewed by Laurenbdavis Laurenbdavis. Ask a question Ask a question If you would like to share feedback with us about pricing, delivery or other customer service issues, please contact customer service directly. Your question required. Additional details. Send me an email when my question is answered. Please enter a valid email address. I agree to the Terms and Conditions. Cancel Submit. Pricing policy About our prices. Walter fidgeted at the invitation. The big-eyed girl kicked off her shoes and waited for his response. The pudgy novelist hesitated, then leaned over to kiss her softly on the neck. Anita sprang to life. In a flash, she shed her dress and sauntered naked to his bedroom. Walter meekly followed. She spread her china-white body over the bed and he covered it with a row of kisses. Walter agreed. Use current location. See all locations. Admin Admin Admin, collapsed. Main navigation Calendar. Open search form. Enter search query Clear Text. Saved Searches Advanced Search. Online Library. Online Events. Kids and Teens. Kids Kids Homework Help. Teens Teens Homework Help. Learn more. The writer, Mel Gordon, has done an excellent job in condensing the essence of various reference materials into a very readable book. For the student hoping to learn more of the culture of Weimar Berlin, this is an essential book. For other Readers, it is an introduction to a most amazing artist I definitely recommend it. May 19, Kevin Richards rated it really liked it. The book provides an interesting overview of the infamous life of Anita Berber, who encompassesd and became the much imitated representative of the dark, corruptible impulses of Weimar inflationary decadence.
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