A Companion to Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain

A Companion to Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain - Studies in German Literature, Linguistics, and Culture

Hardback (08 Mar 1999)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Thomas Mann was the first writer since Goethe to attract a large international audience to stories written in German, bringing German fiction into the mainstream of European literature. His second major work, The Magic Mountain (1924), explores the heady intellectual culture of the chaotic and broken Germany that emerged from the First World War, and, along with the earlier Buddenbrooks, earned him a Nobel Prize for literature in 1929. Mann himself considered The Magic Mountain to be his greatest novel, and few in his own day doubted the preeminence of this modernist classic; however, many have argued that the age of literary modernism has passed. If this is so, how might we best understand Mann's masterpiece now?
Topics covered in this volume, which aims to provide both a survey of and new research into important aspects of the work, include Mann's comic vision, his homosexuality, his fraught attitude toward Jews, the place of his novel in the landscape of postmodern life, the theme of solitude, music in the novel, and technology.
STEPHEN D. DOWDEN is associate professor of German at Brandeis University. Contributors: DAVID BLUMBERG, MICHAEL BRENNER, STEPHEN DOWDEN, EDWARD ENGELBERG, ULKER GÖKBERK, EUGENE GOODHEART, JOSEPH P. LAWRENCE, KARLA SCHULTZ, SUSAN SONTAG, KENNETH WEISINGER

Book information

ISBN: 9781571131508
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Imprint: Camden House
Pub date:
DEWEY: 833.912
DEWEY edition: 21
Language: English
Number of pages: 250
Weight: 572g
Height: 228mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 29mm