Publisher is offline
titleFallschirmseide / μετάξυ αλεξιπτώτων
authorDeborah Jeromin
pages244
size13,5 x 18 cm
languageGreek, German
price20,00€

This essay takes up threads from the past in order to weave them together in the present. The story begins with silkworms in a Leipzig allotment association. The worms were bred for the Nazi arms industry, and silk was extracted from them as material for parachutes. In May 1941, thousands of German paratroopers landed on Crete in the largest airborne invasion in military history. The Germans occupied the island from 1941 to 1944, carrying out mass executions and burning villages to the ground. The Cretan women, who bred silkworms themselves, later worked the German parachutes into handkerchiefs. Women who witnessed events at the time recount the crimes of the Wehrmacht and recall the spinning, weaving, and sewing of silk thread—female techniques of memorization in which program and pattern merge. They constitute a counter-narrative to the one-sided historical account that often focuses only on the heroes.

live now:
program
independent publishing fair