The Last of the Nuba

The Last of the Nuba
The Last of the Nuba  
Lastofthenuba.jpg
Author(s) Leni Riefenstahl
Original title Die Nuba
Illustrator Leni Riefenstahl
Country United States, Germany
Language English (translated), German
Genre(s) Illustrations
Publisher List (Germany)
US- Harper and Row (1973), St. Martin's Press (1995)
Publication date 1973
Published in
English
1974 and 1995
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 208
ISBN 0312136420
OCLC Number 32746545
Dewey Decimal 779/.99626/4 20
LC Classification DT133.N78 R5313 1995
Followed by 'Die Nuba von Kau'

'The Last of the Nuba' is the English-language title of German film director Leni Riefenstahl's 1973 'Die Nuba', an illustrations book published a year later in the United States. The book was an international bestseller and was followed-up by the successful 1976 book Die Nuba von Kau.[1][2]

Contents

Overview

From 1962 until 1977 Riefenstahl had been living as the first white woman with a special permission issued by the Sudanese government in the remote valleys of the central Sudan among the mysterious Nuba tribe. She studied their way of life and recorded it on film and in pictures of unusual fascination for eternity. Particularly the circumstance that through the advance of civilization the Nuba's way of life is approaching its irreversible end is giving these picture documents a unique anthropological, ethnological and cultural-historical importance.[3]

Reception

The book performed well both critically and commercially. It is generally accepted that her photography of the Nuban tribe rehabilitated her career as an artist.

Newsweek called the book "the year's most compelling picture book in any category" one that is "deeply romantic - but never romanticized" and is "monumentally moving". Eudora Welty continued this praise in the New York Times citing its "absorbing beauty" and "cumulative power". Jonas Mekas wrote that her photographs "can cut through your heart" and declared "She is a monument. She is a mountain. She is a genius."[4]

Although shortly after its 1974 release in America, the critic Susan Sontag scrutinized the "fascist aesthetics" of the works in her widely read essay "Fascinating Fascism". Writing in the New York Review of Books in 1975 "The fascist dramaturgy centers on the orgiastic transactions between mighty forces and their puppets," . She continued "Its choreography alternates between ceaseless motion and a congealed, static, 'virile' posing."[5] Sontag writes that the collection was the "final, necessary step in Riefenstahl's rehabilitation. It is the final rewrite of the past; or, for her partisans, the definitive confirmation that she was always a beauty-freak rather than a horrid propagandist"[6] and that it was "certainly the most ravishing book of photographs published anywhere in recent years."[4]

The Art Director's Club of Germany awarded Leni a gold medal for the best photographic achievement of 1975.[7]

Africa collection

The photographs were recently republished along with those of The People of Kau and Vanishing Africa in the 2002 book, Africa by Leni Riefenstahl. The collection garnered positive reviews;

"A big, black Mercedez-Benz of a book.... Ideology aside, the pictures are hard to resist, combining all the voyeuristic pleasures of National Geographic-style anthropology with an unequivocal appreciation of the innate grace and symmetry of the human form... Riefenstahl`s photographs preserve a mythic vision of this Eden before the fall, a romantic lost world, captured in images as powerfully seductive as the artist herself." V Magazine[8]

"A magnificent collection and a fitting celebration of this formidable artist's 100th birthday." The Times Higher Education Supplement[8]

"an imposing collection". Newsweek[8]

Documentary

Together with her other published photographs of the Nuba, several photographs from the book were showcased in the 1993 documentary, The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl. For the first time, Riefenstahl's extensive moving footage of the Nuba was also shown to the public in the film.

See also

References

  1. ^ 'As pretty as a swastika' The Guardian. 12 May 2007
  2. ^ Leni Riefenstahl (obituary) The Times. 10 September 2003
  3. ^ Leni Riefenstahl-Nuba
  4. ^ a b Bach, Steven (2006). Leni- The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl. Abacus. 
  5. ^ Leni Riefenstahl, 101, Dies; Film Innovator Tied to Hitler New York Times. 10 September 2003
  6. ^ The Evolution of Susan Sontag New York Times. 9 February 1976
  7. ^ Leni Riefenstahl interviewed by Kevin Brownlow Taschen
  8. ^ a b c Leni Riefenstahl - Africa- Reviews Taschen. 2000

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