Austerlitz: W G Sebald

In the summer of 1967, a narrator resembling W. G. Sebald encounters Jacques Austerlitz at Antwerp’s Centraal Station. Austerlitz, a scholarly and talkative man in workman’s attire, observes and takes notes on the station, discussing with the narr...

Agencies
In the summer of 1967, a man - who remains unnamed but who resembles the author W G Sebald - is visiting Belgium. At the Centraal Station in Antwerp, he sees a fellow traveller, with fair, curiously wavy hair, who is wearing heavy walking boots, workman's trousers made of blue calico, and a well-made but antiquated jacket. He is intently studying the room and taking notes. This is Jacques Austerlitz.

The two men fall into conversation, have dinner at the station restaurant, and continue to talk into the night. Austerlitz is a voluble scholar - he explains, to the book's narrator, about the slightly grotesque display of colonial confidence represented by Antwerp's Centraal Station, and talks generally about the history of fortification. It is often our mightiest projects, he suggests, that most obviously betray the degree of our insecurity.

Austerlitz and the Sebald-like narrator meet again... It emerges that Jacques Austerlitz is a lecturer at an institute of art history in London, and that his scholarship is unconventional. He is obsessed with monumental public buildings, such as law courts and prisons, railway stations and lunatic asylums....


Translated from German by Anthea Bell
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