Fontane in the twenty-first century

Author(s)

    • Lyon, John B.
    • Tucker, Brian

Bibliographic Information

Fontane in the twenty-first century

edited by John B. Lyon and Brian Tucker

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

Camden House, 2019

  • : [hardcover]

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Assesses the relevance of the works of Fontane, perhaps the foremost German novelist between Goethe and Mann, for the twenty-first century. Theodor Fontane remains a canonical figure in German literature, the most important representative of poetic realism, and likely the best German-language novelist between Goethe and Mann, yet scholarly attention to his works oftenlags behind his stature, at least in the English-speaking academy. This volume, coinciding with Fontane's 200th birthday in 2019, assesses the relevance of his works for us today and also draws attention to the most current English-language research. Much has changed in the last two decades in critical theory, and the volume highlights how new methodological approaches and new archival research can update our understanding of Fontane's works. Although his novels are famously rooted in the details of quotidian life in nineteenth-century Germany, they also reflect larger historical transformations that resonate with our world today (e.g., financial crisis, class conflict, changing gender roles, and migration) and so speak to contemporary critical interests. The volume's contributors draw on literary and cultural studies approaches including gender and sexuality studies, emotion studies, transnationalismand globalization, media and visual studies, rhetorical criticism, paratextual criticism, and digital humanities. Their contributions survey a wide range of Fontane's literary production in order to speak to both German and non-German audiences in the twenty-first century. Contributors: James N. Bade, Russell A. Berman, Katharina Adeline Engler-Coldren, Todd Kontje, John B. Lyon, Ervin Malakaj, Nicolas von Passavant, Lynne Tatlock, Christian Thomas, Brian Tucker, Michael J. White, Holly A. Yanacek. John B. Lyon is Professor of German at the University of Pittsburgh. Brian Tucker is Associate Professor of German at Wabash College.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Note on Editions Introduction: Fontane in the Twenty-First Century - John B. Lyon and Brian Tucker Narrative Digression and the Transformation of Nationhood in Vor dem Sturm - Russell A. Berman Nasty Women: Female Anger as Moral Judgment in Grete Minde and Effi Briest - Holly A. Yanacek Peforming the Philistine: Gossip as a Narrative Device and a Strategy for Reflection on Anti-Semitism in Theodor Fontane's L'Adultera - Nicolas von Passavant To Have an Eye: Visual Culture and the Misapprehension of Class in Irrungen, Wirrungen - Brian Tucker Fontane as a Pacifist? The Anti-War Message in Quitt and Fontane's Changing Attitude to Militarism - James N. Bade Disjunctive Transnationalisms in Fontane's Frau Jenny Treibel - John B. Lyon On the "Right Measure" in Effi Briest: Ethics and Aesthetics of the Prosaic - Katharina Adeline Engler-Coldren Transfiguration, Effect, and Engagement: Theodor Fontane's Aesthetic Thought - Michael J. White Fontane and World Literature: Prussians, Jews, and the Specter of Africa in Die Poggenpuhls - Todd Kontje Von Zwanzig bis Dreissig: The Male Author in Parts - Lynne Tatlock Melusine von Barby's Barriers and Connections in Fontane's Der Stechlin - Christian Thomas Senescence and Fontane's Der Stechlin - Ervin Malakaj Notes on the Contributors Index

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