The German Picaro and Modernity: Between Underdog and Shape-Shifter: New Directions in German Studies
Autor Bernhard Malkmusen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 mai 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781628929539
ISBN-10: 1628929537
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 140 x 213 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1628929537
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 140 x 213 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Allows us to appreciate narrative forms as co-emerging with forms of social self-reflection.
Notă biografică
Bernhard F. Malkmus is Associate Professor of German at The Ohio State University, USA.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments IntroductionBoxing (In) Life StoriesChapter OneThe Spanish Picaresque Tradition and Its European Repercussions Chapter Two"Students Who Have Lost the Holy Writ": Franz Kafka's Der VerscholleneChapter ThreeStudents Who Have Lost Their Teachers: Robert Walser's Jakob von GuntenPicaresque Topoi ITertium Datur: Between Autonomy and Self-PreservationChapter FourThe Confidence Man as Shape-Shifter: Thomas Mann's Bekenntnisse des Hochstaplers Felix KrullPicaresque Topoi IIThird Space: A Stage for the Modern PícaroChapter FiveThe Shape-Shifter as Underdog: Edgar Hilsenrath's Der Nazi und der FriseurPicaresque Topoi IIIThird Agents: The Inclusion of the ExcludedChapter SixThe Eternal Recurrence of the Picaresque Body: Günter Grass' Die BlechtrommelConclusionDrumming (Out) Life StoriesBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
"In this bold and intelligent new volume, Bernhard Malkmus uses the pícaro figure to explore fundamental questions of the constitution of the subject in modernity. The book presents a set of original and searching new readings of texts, both canonical and less familiar, with considerable implications for the understanding of the conditions of modern culture, especially—but not only—in their German form." -- Andrew J. Webber, Professor of Modern German and Comparative Culture, Head of the Department of German and Dutch, University of Cambridge, UK
"Socialized into the German cultural tradition, but equally familiar with the literatures of the Iberian Peninsula, Bernhard Malkmus, in his book The German Pícaro and Modernity, made me aware of and fully developed a thought that had previously (but only vaguely) crossed my mind. This is the thought of whether a specific—and quite ironically: a specifically deep—connection could exist between the figure of the 'Pícaro' and what we have come to identify as 'the German mind.' A connection where the 'Pícaro'—not unlike certain tones in the legacy of Romantic literature—embodied and articulated what a culture so intensely invested in metaphysical depth has never taken the freedom to think." -- Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Albert Guérard Professor in Literature, Professor of French and Italian and Comparative Literature, Stanford University, USA
"German literature is often supposed to be serious, strenuous, even ponderous. With Bernhard Malkmus' study on the German pícaro, we step right into a totally different landscape of German literature: alert, playful, entertaining and elegant. The refinement comes from the change of view Malkmus is proposing. The hero of this exciting book is old-fashioned and progressive at the same time; deriving from the pícaro in the Spanish Renaissance, he enters modernity as a trickster who finds himself both inside and outside of the social system. With his mastery of mimicry and simulation, the trickster challenges historical facts as well as moral virtues. Writers such as Robert Walser, Franz Kafka, and Thomas Mann employed their trickster-protagonists to confront the world as it is with the ironic playfulness of chance, dream, and emotions. Even in the most desperate chapters of German history, Malkmus finds proofs for the resistance of the picaresque. His book is an impressive demonstration of the art of story-telling, and a plea for the power of fantasy." -- Alexander Honold, Professor of German Literature, Basel University, Switzerland.
This is not a work for the generalist or fainthearted; this is a useful tool for those already familiar with the literature.
...demonstrates that although the picaro belongs to certain times, it is also a figure of ambivalent transcendence, celebrating resilience and its satisfactions over solemnity and its imperatives. - Benjamin Robinson, Indiana University Bloomington
"Socialized into the German cultural tradition, but equally familiar with the literatures of the Iberian Peninsula, Bernhard Malkmus, in his book The German Pícaro and Modernity, made me aware of and fully developed a thought that had previously (but only vaguely) crossed my mind. This is the thought of whether a specific—and quite ironically: a specifically deep—connection could exist between the figure of the 'Pícaro' and what we have come to identify as 'the German mind.' A connection where the 'Pícaro'—not unlike certain tones in the legacy of Romantic literature—embodied and articulated what a culture so intensely invested in metaphysical depth has never taken the freedom to think." -- Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Albert Guérard Professor in Literature, Professor of French and Italian and Comparative Literature, Stanford University, USA
"German literature is often supposed to be serious, strenuous, even ponderous. With Bernhard Malkmus' study on the German pícaro, we step right into a totally different landscape of German literature: alert, playful, entertaining and elegant. The refinement comes from the change of view Malkmus is proposing. The hero of this exciting book is old-fashioned and progressive at the same time; deriving from the pícaro in the Spanish Renaissance, he enters modernity as a trickster who finds himself both inside and outside of the social system. With his mastery of mimicry and simulation, the trickster challenges historical facts as well as moral virtues. Writers such as Robert Walser, Franz Kafka, and Thomas Mann employed their trickster-protagonists to confront the world as it is with the ironic playfulness of chance, dream, and emotions. Even in the most desperate chapters of German history, Malkmus finds proofs for the resistance of the picaresque. His book is an impressive demonstration of the art of story-telling, and a plea for the power of fantasy." -- Alexander Honold, Professor of German Literature, Basel University, Switzerland.
This is not a work for the generalist or fainthearted; this is a useful tool for those already familiar with the literature.
...demonstrates that although the picaro belongs to certain times, it is also a figure of ambivalent transcendence, celebrating resilience and its satisfactions over solemnity and its imperatives. - Benjamin Robinson, Indiana University Bloomington