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Landmarks in the German Novel

Part 1

by Peter Hutchinson (Volume editor)
©2007 Edited Collection 242 Pages

Summary

There is a large pool of German novelists in whose oeuvre we may look for works of landmark significance, and at certain periods of its history German fiction is particularly rich. Yet although the novel begins to assert itself in the seventeenth century, we have to wait until the late eighteenth, and Goethe’s first major prose work, Werther, to see it truly rise to the level of other genres. The thirteen novels featured in this collection have all proved milestones in the development of the form, and there is heavy prominence given to works by Goethe himself and by Thomas Mann. Through these, as well as those by such figures as Kafka, Hesse, and Günter Grass, we can trace the development of the novel to its far more ‘self-conscious’ form, ranging through the social studies of the nineteenth to works which treat a variety of intellectual, psychological and philosophical issues in the twentieth. A second volume will cover landmarks published between 1959 and the present day.
These essays, all by specialists in the relevant field, were originally delivered as lectures in the University of Cambridge.

Details

Pages
242
Publication Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039109272
Language
English
Keywords
Roman Development of Novel Deutsch Geschichte 1774-1999 Aufsatzsammlung Goethe Keller Hesse Eighteenth century
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2007. 242 pp.

Biographical notes

Peter Hutchinson (Volume editor)

The Editor: Peter Hutchinson is Reader in German in the University of Cambridge and Director of Studies in Modern Languages at Trinity Hall. He has published widely on German literature and has edited a number of texts and collections of essays.

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Title: Landmarks in the German Novel