Ayrıca bakınız
- tr.wikipedia.org Günter GrassEkim 2014'ten bu yana Lübeck'teki Günter Grass Haus, sabit sergiye "asker olarak Grass” başlıklı bölümü de ekledi.
- en.wikipedia.org Günter GrassThe Günter Grass House in Lübeck houses exhibitions of his drawings and sculptures, and an archive and a library.[53].
- dw.com en/the-world-mourns-günter-grass/a-18378117German Chancellor Angela Merkel has paid tribute to the life and work of Günter Grass, saying Grass had "accompanied and shaped Germany's...
- you-books.com author/GrassCat and Mouse was the book Günter Grass wrote immediately after The Tin Drum, and it shares its setting with that earlier novel: Danzig during World War II.
- Growing up Under Nazism Günter Wilhelm Grass was born in the Free City of Danzig (now Gdansk, Poland) on October 16, 1927.
- sozkimin.com gunter-grass-kimdir-sozleri-ve-…Günter Grass 15 yaşında Reichsarbeitsdienst'e (RAD) kaydolmuş ve ardından Luftwaffenhelfer'e, Luftwaffe'ye yardım elemanı olarak katılmıştır.
- eksisozluk.com gunter-grass--140555?p=2...kamuoyunun dikkatini çekti. bundan sonra romancı olarak ünlenmesine rağmen şiir yazmaya da devam etmiştir. günter grass, resim ve heykel konusunda da.
- poetryfoundation.org poets/gunter-grassGünter Grass is widely considered one of Germany’s most important postwar writers and intellectuals. He was born and raised in Danzig, then known as “the Free...
- bilgipesinde.com detay/gunter-grassGünter Grass'ın yaşam öyküsü: Doğum tarihi: 16 Ekim 1927, Danzig Serbest Şehri Ölüm tarihi ve yeri: 13 Nisan 2015, Lübeck, Almanya.
- britannica.com biography/Gunter-Grass2024, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Gunter-Grass. ... Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Günter Grass". Encyclopedia Britannica, 9 Apr.
- listelist.com gunter-grass-kimdir/Yaşarken Alman edebiyatının klasikleri arasına girmiş isimlerden Günter Grass, hep bir tabu yıkan olmayı, kendi yüzyılıyla hesaplaşmayı seçti.
- theguardian.com books/2015/apr/13/gunter-grassOutside Germany, Günter Grass’s examination of the crimes of the Nazi period inevitably led to him being described as the country’s postwar conscience.
Günter Grass