My Account    Basket
 
English  Deutsch  Français  
BOOKSHOP AUTHORS SERVICES COMPANIES
 Highlights
   Peter Lang Belgium
   Peter Lang Germany
   Peter Lang England
   Peter Lang Austria
   Peter Lang Switzerland
   Peter Lang USA
 Bestsellers
 Books
 New Books
 Disciplines
 Textbooks
 Series
 Journals
 Rights and Licences
 Peter Lang Press
 Download catalogues
 General information
Quick search
Go!
Advanced search
Sitemap
Contact
Home
 Featured title
Buendía, Edward / Ares, Nancy
Geographies of Difference
 Recently viewed books
Harris, Nigel / Sayner, Joann...
The Text and its Context
Hess, Andreas
Reluctant Modernization
Roberts, Stephen
The Chartist Prisoners
Harkness, Nigel / Rowe, Paul ...
Visions/Revisions
Yelland, Nicola / Rubin, Ande...
Ghosts in the Machine
 Details
Recommend this book to someone  
Harris, Nigel / Sayner, Joanne (eds)  available 
The Text and its Context
Studies in Modern German Literature and Society Presented to Ronald Speirs on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday
Year of Publication: 2008
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2008. 356 pp., 5 ill.
ISBN 978-3-03910-928-9  pb.
 
[Review copy request    
[Buy Licence, translation rights] [Copyright]
[PDF version] [Table of contents]
Sales price
SFR 75.00 * 51.10 ** 52.60 47.80 £ 43.00 US-$ 74.95
  *  includes VAT - only valid for Germany  [Currency of invoice] 
  **  includes VAT - only valid for Austria
Discipline
  General and Comparative Literature
  Germanic Languages and Literatures
Book synopsis
This Festschrift for Ronald Speirs, Professor of German at the University of Birmingham, contains twenty-four original essays by scholars from Great Britain, Germany, Austria, and Norway. Between them they encompass the entire modern period from the later eighteenth century onwards, and focus on a wide range of German-speaking environments. Several essays throw new light on authors to whom Professor Speirs himself has devoted particular attention (such as Brecht, Thomas Mann, Nietzsche, and Fontane), whilst others discuss writers such as Lenz, Büchner, Böhlau, C. F. Meyer, Keyserling, Jahnn, and Huch. Above all, however, the contributions address the complexities of writing in ideologically diverse contexts, including the Third Reich and the former German Democratic Republic. This interplay between text and context is the cornerstone which links all the essays, as it has consistently informed Ronald Speirs's own work - which combines a scrupulous attention to textual detail with an acute awareness of the socio-political milieux and philosophical influences that shape creative literature.
Contents
Contents: Rosemary Ashton: Thomas Mann, Thomas Carlyle, and Frederick the Great - Alan Bance: 'Use Well the Interval': Thomas Mann's Essay 'Der alte Fontane' and the Topos of Old Age - Michael Butler: Literature and the Politics of Exile: The Case of Bernard von Brentano - Helen Chambers: The Child Bride: Engagements 1890s-style in Fontane, Böhlau, Ebner-Eschenbach, and Huch - Bill Dodd: '... dem Kaiser gegeben was des Kaisers ist': Walter Benjamin's Reading of Dolf Sternberger's 'Tempel der Kunst' (1937) - Elystan Griffiths/David Hill: Drafting the Self: The Poet as Reformer and Performer in J. M. R. Lenz's Berkaer Projekt - Hans H. Hiebel: Zweistimmige Sätze: Büchners Danton's Tod - Martin Kane: 'Er spielt ein so verwickeltes Spiel' (Wilhelm Liebknecht). Literary Representations of the Association between Ferdinand Lassalle and Otto von Bismarck - John Klapper: Encouragement for the 'Other Germany'? Stefan Andres's Publications in the Krakauer Zeitung 1940-1943 - Tom Kuhn: Three Models of the Poem-Picture Relationship in the Work of Bertolt Brecht - Richard Littlejohns: In the No-man's-land beyond Biography: Dr Cake, Mozart, and Other Cases - Nicholas Martin: Thomas Mann's Mario und der Zauberer: 'Simply a Story of Human Affairs' - Jochen Meyer: 'Man zerlegt den Elefanten, aber man sieht ihn nicht'. Hans Henny Jahnn, Oskar Loerke und ein Debüt - John Osborne: Equivalence, Parallelism, Reflection: Burckhardt, Hodler, and Conrad Ferdinand Meyer between Historicism and Modernism - Rolf Parr: Soziale und naturale Grenzziehungen in Eduard von Keyserlings Roman Wellen (1911) - Philip Payne/Malcolm Spencer: Approaches to Robert Musil's Die Verwirrungen des Zöglings Törleß - J. M. Ritchie: Max Zimmering's Unfreiwillige Weltreise - Beatrice Sandberg: Schweizer Autoren im Abseits? - Mary E. Stewart: Seeing with New Eyes: Vision and the Short Story in German Naturalism - Martin Swales: Brecht and the Onslaught on Tragedy - Dennis Tate: Böhme[n] am Meer, 'Bohemien mit Heimweh': Franz Fühmann's Competing Identities and his Tribute to Tonio Kröger - Wilfried van der Will: Nietzsche and Wagner: The Fate of a Friendship and the Project of Cultural Renewal - Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly: Representations of the Heroic Maiden. Eleonore Prochaska in Nineteenth-Century German Literature - John White/Ann White: Mi-en-leh's Progeny: Some of Brecht's Early Theatrical Parables and their Political Contexts.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
The Editors: Nigel Harris is Reader in German at the University of Birmingham. His publications include monographs on the Latin and German Etymachia (1994 and 1995), and an edition of the Lumen anime C and Ulrich Putsch's Das Liecht der sel (2007). He has also written numerous articles, principally on high- and late-medieval literature.
Joanne Sayner is Lecturer in Cultural Theory in the Department of German Studies at the University of Birmingham. Her publications include Women without a Past? German Autobiographical Writings and Fascism (2007) and articles on Melita Maschmann, Elfriede Brüning, Grete Weil, and Elisabeth Langgässer.
     Top Print Page 
© 2005 Peter Lang Publishing Group  Created by Peter Lang AG  Design by Peter Lang AG
last update: 22 July 2010  Books online: 48090