Artificial I's : the self as artwork in Ovid, Kierkegaard, and Thomas Mann

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Artificial I's : the self as artwork in Ovid, Kierkegaard, and Thomas Mann

Eric Downing

(Studien zur deutschen Literatur, Bd. 127)

Niemeyer, 1993

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Includes bibliographical references (p. 238-244)

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This study explores three works in which the protagonist undertakes to fashion a literary artwork out of himself: Ovid's "Ars Amatoria", Kierkegaard's "Diary of the Seducer", and Thomas Mann's "Felix Krull". For each work, particular attention is paid to the self-conscious interplay between the author's project of book-making and the character's project of self-making, as well as to the effect of changing notions of self-identity on the protagonist's attempt at life as literature. For "Felix Krull", this includes a sustained analysis of Mann's incorporation and problematization of various Nietzschean models of aesthestics, reality, and self-identity. In Ovid and Kierkegaard, this study also considers a related project, the attempt to fashion a literary artwork out of another, namely out of a woman.

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