Tag: modern
Agreement at the railway: “Innovative, modern and a good solution for everyone”
As of: March 26, 2024 1:01 p.m The 35-hour week at Deutsche Bahn can come – gradually until 2029. This is what the agreement in the tariff dispute between Bahn…
Kafka – Modern Man: “Kafka also spoke German”
Three encounters and a self-defense with the poet who let the fire of this damned world burn him more than other people. source site
Kafka – modern man: pure slapstick
Things already start in Kafka’s first novel: right from the start it is full of cool comedy – the preservative of prose. source site
Police: Merz calls for the use of modern technology against extremists
police Merz calls for the use of modern technology against extremists Friedrich Merz calls for more extensive use of modern technology by the investigative authorities. photo © Bernd Weißbrod/dpa German…
Kafka – the modern man: The endless research
“Been to the cinema. Wept,” is perhaps Franz Kafka’s most famous diary note. When you try to understand what he saw there, you meet the most amazing people. source site
Hotel Maistra 160: Pontresina has a modern grand hotel. – Trip
Concrete on the outside, stunningly comfortable on the inside: architect Gion Caminada shows what a hotel in the mountains can be like today with the Maistra 160 in Pontresina. Irritation…
Kafka – modern man: Nothing but body shame
Franz Kafka had a keen sense of the external nature of human existence. How can someone like that love? Only in his own words. source site
Pop singer: Al Bano not a fan of modern music
pop singer Al Bano not a fan of modern music The Italian singer Al Bano. photo © David Zorrakino/EUROPA PRESS/dpa The Italian pop singer Al Bano, known for hits like…
Kafka – modern man: In the schoolhouse
Do floors have to shine but texts have to be unruly? When Kafka’s stories come to mind while cleaning desks, blackboards and linoleum. source site
Kafka – modern man: The joy and suffering of law
The most famous double life in literary history: Franz Kafka suffered from his day job, but his fulfillment, it is said, was writing. Can that be true? source site