Ingo R. Stoehr – författare
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2 produkter
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This Volume 74 closes The German Library, a project that has spanned 25 years. It includes poetry, prose, and drama of the modern Austrian period primarily drawn from the magazine, "Dimension2". Other authors represented are Thomas Bernhard, H. C. Artmann, Ernst Jandl, Friederike Mayrocker, and others. It includes: Poetry - H. C. Artmann, "A xunz Lamentawoe," "drei dog schoriar e...," "Rosina"; Ernst Jandl, "gut kleid," "wiedergefunden," "das bleiben," "Korrespondenz," "Rekorde"; Friederike Mayroecker, "Kindersommer," "Maria am Gestade,"; "Meine Mutter mid den offenen Armen," "Anrichteschrank, Stilleben am Morgen," "Seraphim, oder vor einer Reise" Alfred Kolleritsch, "Dem Ende entgagen," "Verrit," "Sprache," "Von den Lippen," "Gedenken," "Einblick"; Michael Donhauser, "Der Pfirsich," 12 haiku, "Drei Lose," "IN den Rosenstrauch," "Abendwind"; Raoul Schrott, "Physikalische Optik II," "Eine Geschichte der Schrift IV"; Prose - Thomas Berhnard, "Is It Comedy? Is It Tragedy?"; Barbara Frischmuth, "Salon Ramona"; Gerhard Roth [selection to be determined]; Norbert Gstrein, "The Commercial"; Robert Manasse [to be determined]; Josef Haslinger [to be determined]; Michael Scharang, "Sparrow Michelangelo"; Joseph Zoderer, "Das Schildkroetenfest"; and, Drama - Elfriede Jelinek, "Clara S". It contains biographical sketches; as well as select bibliography.
Del 10 - Camden House History of German Literature
German Literature of the Twentieth Century
From Aestheticism to Postmodernism
Inbunden, Engelska, 2001
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Traces literary developments in the German-speaking countries from 1900 to the present.This study of German literature in the past hundred years sets its subject clearly in the artistic and political context of developments in Western Europe during the century. It begins with the turn-of-the-century aestheticism andvisions of decay led by Schnitzler, Hofmannsthal and other Austrian writers, and the quite different explosion of new artistic energy in the Expressionist and Dada movements. These movements are succeeded by the rise of Modernism, culminating in the inter-war years: the poetry of Rilke, Brecht's epic theatre, and novels by Thomas Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Musil, Doblin and Broch; the influence of Nazism on literary production is considered. The study of developments after 1945 reflects the struggle to establish a post-Holocaust literature and to deal with the questions posed by the political division of Germany. Finally, the convergence of East and West German literature after unification is addressed.Ingo R. Stoehr teaches literature at Kilgore College, Texas, and is editor of the bilingual journal of German literature in English translation, Dimension2.