Adalbert Stifter's late prose : the mania for moderation

Bibliographic Information

Adalbert Stifter's late prose : the mania for moderation

Helena Ragg-Kirkby

(Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture / edited by James Hardin)

Camden House, 2000

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [118]-132) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Provides a view of the late Stifter as a forerunner of twentieth-century modernism. Adalbert Stifter has always been viewed as a natural heir to the Great Classical tradition, even by those critics who detect disturbing subtexts in his fiction. But he should be viewed quite differently: however well disguised, heis in truth a closet modernist, and a major trailblazer for Kafka and the Absurd. This is most evident in his late fiction, which has been almost universally ignored, dismissed or disparaged by his critics. His last novel Witiko in particular has been conspicuously neglected by both nineteenth- and twentieth-century critics. Ragg-Kirkby demonstrates -- largely by way of close reading -- that this is Stifter's extreme masterpiece. Beneath the surface of Biedermeier stuffiness is a vision of fracture, emptiness, meaninglessness, and mania not only more radical than that of any other 19th-century author, but arguably more radical than that of any 20th-century author, precisely because there is such a disjuncture between text and sub-text. In his final novel, Stifter simply leaves the future behind. Helena Ragg-Kirkby is a lecturer in German at the University of Sheffield.

Table of Contents

Introduction Rituals and Sublimations Masking and the Void Ritual in Style A Stylistic Dystopia Witiko and the Blighted Paradise Witiko and the Ineffable Conclusion

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top