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The Ister (D. Barison & D. Ross, 2004)

EN

EN

The Ister (D. Barison & D. Ross, 2004)

The Ister was inspired by a 1942 lecture course delivered by the German philosopher Martin Heidegger, published in 1984 as Hölderlins Hymne « Der Ister ». Heidegger’s lecture course concerns a poem by the German poet Friedrich Hölderlin about the Danube River. The film The Ister travels upstream along the Danube toward its source, as several interviewees (the French philosophers Bernard Stiegler, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, as well as with the German film director Hans-Jürgen Syberberg) discuss Heidegger, Hölderlin, and philosophy. The film is also concerned with a number of other themes, including : time, poetry, technology, home, war, politics, myth, National Socialism, the Holocaust, the ancient Greek polis, Sophocles, Antigone, Agnes Bernauer, Edmund Husserl, the 1991 battle of Vukovar, and the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.

(Source : en.wikipedia.org)

CineWords

Directors : David Barison & Daniel Ross
Year : 2004
Languages : French, German, English (subtitled)
Running Time : 189 Minutes

This CineWords session
is a module of the Term Course