Stereotype and Destiny in Arthur Schnitzler’s Prose: Five Psycho-Sociological Readings: New Directions in German Studies
Autor Dr Marie Kolkenbrocken Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 aug 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501357329
ISBN-10: 1501357328
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501357328
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Includes readings of canonical texts, such as Traumnovelle (Dream Story), as well as of less familiar texts, particularly the narratives published in the Dämmerseelen volume
Notă biografică
Marie Kolkenbrock is a Branco Weiss Fellow at King's College London, UK.
Cuprins
List of AbbreviationsIntroduction1. Stereotypes and Physiognomy in Der Weg ins Freie (Road into the Open)2. Madness and Investiture in Flucht in die Finsternis (Flight into Darkness)3. Race and Destiny in Die Weissagung (The Prophecy) and Andreas Thameyer's letzter Brief (Andreas Thameyer's Last Letter): (Dämmerseelen I) (Dozing Souls I)4. Love as Destiny and Cliché in Die Fremde (The Stranger), Das Schicksal des Freiherrn von Leisenbohg (Baron Leisenbohg's Destiny), and Das neue Lied (The New Song): (Dämmerseelen II) (Dozing Souls II)5. Dream, Destiny, and Infectious Alterity in Traumnovelle (Dream Story)Conclusion and OutlookBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
This study's nuanced and remarkably cohesive readings are well-versed in social theory, cultural history, and narratology. ... book offers a thorough examination of the complex of stereotyping, which illuminates broader psychosociological phenomena
Kolkenbrock's book provides a compelling analysis of the much-studied crises of subjectivity in fin-de-siècle Vienna by focusing with laser-like precision on the interplay between stereotypes and destiny in Schnitzler's prose fiction. It earns its place alongside previous studies of Schnitzler and the crisis of identity and should serve to inspire further work in this area.
"This fresh and original contribution to the scholarly literature on Arthur Schnitzler is informed by critical paradigms of poststructuralism (particularly Judith Butler and Pierre Bourdieu) and builds a strong theoretical foundation for original readings of several of his prose works . One of the strengths of this study is its broad definition and problematization of the concept of stereotyping . This monograph is unfailingly lucid in its argumentation and contains a comprehensive apparatus that will be useful to scholars, students, and interested readers. The author is clearly well read in social theory and narratology and brings this nuanced perspective to her readings of individual texts. It is part of the exciting New Directions in German Studies series from Bloomsbury and is a valuable addition to Schnitzler scholarship."
Kolkenbrock's original reading of Arthur Schnitzler's narrative prose both identifies the hidden normative agenda dominating Viennese society around 1900 and attends to Schnitzler's complex view of the human psyche. As Kolkenbrock lucidly shows, Schnitzler's protagonists seek individual autonomy in a society in which stereotypes about sex, race, and culture delimit the parameters of their actions. Kolkenbrock reveals that this futile search for autonomy inevitably leads Schnitzler's protagonists to the figure of the 'other'-one in conflict with the normative order-yet these encounters ultimately do not provide a sustained escape from societal restraints.
Kolkenbrock's elegant and original study discovers 'destiny' as a term for the missing substance of subjectivity in Schnitzler's prose works. By defining the different relations between an individual character's encounter with a sense of destiny, on one hand, and the operation of social stereotyping, on the other, she constructs a supple theoretical tool. The resulting analysis gives a beautifully lucid, but also subtly differentiated, account of how Schnitzler's work embodies the impossible challenge confronting personhood not only in fin-de-siècle Austro-Hungarian reality, but arguably in modernity in general: how to be normal and special at the same time.
Kolkenbrock's book provides a compelling analysis of the much-studied crises of subjectivity in fin-de-siècle Vienna by focusing with laser-like precision on the interplay between stereotypes and destiny in Schnitzler's prose fiction. It earns its place alongside previous studies of Schnitzler and the crisis of identity and should serve to inspire further work in this area.
"This fresh and original contribution to the scholarly literature on Arthur Schnitzler is informed by critical paradigms of poststructuralism (particularly Judith Butler and Pierre Bourdieu) and builds a strong theoretical foundation for original readings of several of his prose works . One of the strengths of this study is its broad definition and problematization of the concept of stereotyping . This monograph is unfailingly lucid in its argumentation and contains a comprehensive apparatus that will be useful to scholars, students, and interested readers. The author is clearly well read in social theory and narratology and brings this nuanced perspective to her readings of individual texts. It is part of the exciting New Directions in German Studies series from Bloomsbury and is a valuable addition to Schnitzler scholarship."
Kolkenbrock's original reading of Arthur Schnitzler's narrative prose both identifies the hidden normative agenda dominating Viennese society around 1900 and attends to Schnitzler's complex view of the human psyche. As Kolkenbrock lucidly shows, Schnitzler's protagonists seek individual autonomy in a society in which stereotypes about sex, race, and culture delimit the parameters of their actions. Kolkenbrock reveals that this futile search for autonomy inevitably leads Schnitzler's protagonists to the figure of the 'other'-one in conflict with the normative order-yet these encounters ultimately do not provide a sustained escape from societal restraints.
Kolkenbrock's elegant and original study discovers 'destiny' as a term for the missing substance of subjectivity in Schnitzler's prose works. By defining the different relations between an individual character's encounter with a sense of destiny, on one hand, and the operation of social stereotyping, on the other, she constructs a supple theoretical tool. The resulting analysis gives a beautifully lucid, but also subtly differentiated, account of how Schnitzler's work embodies the impossible challenge confronting personhood not only in fin-de-siècle Austro-Hungarian reality, but arguably in modernity in general: how to be normal and special at the same time.