Bookshelf

Lukas Bärfuss: "Der Bus", Hartmann und Stauffacher, 2005

The bus driver Hermann stops by the side of the road in the middle of a forest and takes a young woman travelling without a ticket to task. She says her name is Erika and claims to be a pilgrim who has accidentally got on the wrong bus on her way to Czestochowa, the most important holy site in Poland. Hermann does not believe her and breaks her hand when she tries to pray. Next she encounters the petrol pump attendant Anton, a drinker and biodiesel activist. But Erika refuses to stay with him and travels further with the morbid company of spa visitors, who ultimately desire, or would at least condone, her death. High up in the mountains, close to the peaks, Hermann digs Erika’s grave. But she is able to flee and finds her way to Anton, who takes her in. However, her afflictions have not come to an end. And ultimately, Erika has no other choice but to actually go on to Czestochowa, even if she seems to have lost all sense of the purpose of her mission on the journey. (Thalia Theater, Hamburg)

Responses to the Play:

“Bärfuss describes a coalition of the unwilling to live, whose vehicle is a death bus that vibrates with esoteric philosophy, infirmity and brewing conspiracy. High in the mountains, where the world is still beautiful, they want to leave it behind them forever. With his wonderfully unique poetic language, which transcends time, Bärfuss succeeds yet again in creating a theatrical work of impressive symbolic power and intensity, with grotesque humour, an extraordinary instinct for the Zeitgeist and brilliantly drawn characters.” (Verlag Hartmann und Stauffacher)

“With his dramatic confessio ‘Der Bus’, the Swiss writer Lukas Bärfuss has succeeded in creating a brilliant play that is highly explosive in its reconsideration of the loss of meaning and belief in the Western world: in comparison to the post-structuralist texts of many contemporary authors, it is quite classical in construction and modest in style, linear in structure and compellingly simple in its language. And yet so rich in existential questions. Which evade clear answers. Bärfuss briefly sketches out fully rounded characters, each one with a great sounding board for unspoken yearnings and unresolved issues. In the course of the play, it is less belief that is under examination than the believability of the characters – and also their capacity for belief: in themselves, in life, in the Other.”
(Christine Dössel, “Süddeutsche Zeitung”, 1.02.2005)

“It is not the great religious front line, […] it is the insignificant little incidents that occur in pedestrian precincts […] that the young Swiss dramatist Lukas Bärfuss puts at the centre of his new play. With magical lightness and clever persistence, ‘Der Bus’ asks the question of questions: in other words, what we feel about religion. […] Pain and sectarianism, fear and trust, good and evil – the religious themes seem to emerge quite naturally out of Bärfuss’s dialogue, as symptoms, like neuroses, like illnesses. The play posits a small grammar of the spiritual in a post-atheist age. This is all overshadowed by a strange paradox: We can no longer believe in belief, but it has us firmly in its grip. The more things spin out of control in the mountains, the more we sense how indivisible civilisation and religion are.”
(Peter Michalzik, “Frankfurter Rundschau”, 1.02.2005)

Рецензию театрального критика Павла Руднева можно прочитать здесь.

About the author

Nadia Sikorsky

Nadia Sikorsky grew up in Moscow where she obtained a master's degree in journalism and a doctorate in history from Moscow State University. After 13 years at UNESCO, in Paris and then in Geneva, and having served as director of communications at Green Cross International founded by Mikhail Gorbachev, she developed NashaGazeta.ch, the first online Russian-language daily newspaper, launched in 2007.

In 2022, she found herself among those who, according to Le Temps editorial board, "significantly contributed to the success of French-speaking Switzerland," thus appearing among opinion makers and economic, political, scientific and cultural leaders: the Forum of 100.

After 18 years leading NashaGazeta.ch, Nadia Sikorsky decided to return to her roots and focus on what truly fascinates her: culture in all its diversity. This decision took the form of this trilingual cultural blog (Russian, English, French) born in the heart of Europe – in Switzerland, her adopted country, the country distinguished by its multiculturalism and multilingualism.

Nadia Sikorsky does not present herself as a "Russian voice," but as the voice of a European of Russian origin (more than 35 years in Europe, 25 years spent in Switzerland) with the benefit of more than 30 years of professional experience in the cultural world at the international level. She positions herself as a cultural mediator between Russian and European traditions; the title of the blog, "The Russian Accent," captures this essence – the accent being not a linguistic barrier, not a political position but a distinctive cultural imprint in the European context.

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