Narrative strategies in the novels of Jeremias Gotthelf

Bibliographic Information

Narrative strategies in the novels of Jeremias Gotthelf

Robert Godwin-Jones

(American university studies, ser. 1 . Germanic languages and literature ; v. 42)

P. Lang, c1986

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Note

Bibliography: p. [163]-165

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study examines all Gotthelf's published novels and attempts to reconcile two aspects of his fiction which critics have generally seen as being in conflict with one another: his pedagogical intent and his artistic instinct. It does this through an analysis of the reader's role in the novels. The study seeks to reveal if and how Gotthelf's expressed intentions are reflected in the novels' narrative strategies. This involves an examination of the ways in which the reader's interest is established and maintained in the different novels and how the devices used to achieve these effects relate to the author's moral, social and political vision. Furthermore, a novel-by-novel analysis shows how the reader's role was affected by Gotthelf's changing views on the social function of his fiction.

Table of Contents

Contents: Gotthelf's Readers - Social Reform Through Autobiography - The Reader as Mentor - The Reader as Gardener of Happiness - Enlightening Natural Man - Politics and Perdition - God's Hand - Battling the Zeitgeist - The Reader in Gotthelf.

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