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alp227 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-12-10 02:51 PM
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German teenage author exposed as plagiarist
Author, 17, Says It’s ‘Mixing,’ Not Plagiarism
By Nicholas Kulish
The New York Times
February 11, 2010

BERLIN — It usually takes an author decades to win fawning reviews, march up the best-seller list and become a finalist for a major book prize. Helene Hegemann, just 17, did it with her first book, all in the space of a few weeks, and despite a savaging from critics over plagiarism.

The publication last month of her novel about a 16-year-old exploring Berlin’s drug and club scene after the death of her mother, called “Axolotl Roadkill,” was heralded far and wide in German newspapers and magazines as a tremendous debut, particularly for such a young author. The book shot to No. 5 this week on the magazine Spiegel’s hardcover best-seller list.

For the obviously gifted Ms. Hegemann, who already had a play (written and staged) and a movie (written, directed and released in theaters) to her credit, it was an early ascension to the ranks of artistic stardom. That is, until a blogger last week uncovered material in the novel taken from the less-well-known novel “Strobo,” by an author writing under the nom de plume Airen. In one case, an entire page was lifted with few changes.

As other unattributed sources came to light, outsize praise quickly turned to a torrent of outrage, reminiscent of the uproar in 2006 over a Harvard sophomore, Kaavya Viswanathan, who was caught plagiarizing numerous passages in her much praised debut novel. But Ms. Hegemann’s story took a very different turn.

On Thursday, Ms. Hegemann’s book was announced as one of the finalists for the $20,000 prize of the Leipzig Book Fair in the fiction category. And a member of the jury said Thursday that the panel had been aware of the plagiarism charges before they made their final selection.

Ms. Hegemann finds herself in the middle of a collision — if not road kill exactly — between the staid, literary establishment in a country that venerates writers from Goethe to Mann to Grass, and the Berlin youth culture of D.J.’s and artists that sample freely and thereby breathe creativity into old forms. Or as one character, Edmond, puts it in the book, “Berlin is here to mix everything with everything.”

Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/12/world/europe/12germany.html
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RaleighNCDUer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-12-10 03:32 PM
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1. I can see how lifting another's character and putting it in your own work
could be construed as 'mixing' - but taking entire passages of prose without attribution is just plain lazy assed shit.
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anonymous171 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-12-10 03:33 PM
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2. This is one of the reasons why I am always suspicious of young writers.
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